Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8028521 | Surface and Coatings Technology | 2014 | 5 Pages |
Abstract
Aqueous-based inorganic-organic hybrid coating materials comprising self-assembled silica nanophase (SNAP) particles and the sodium salt of 9,10-anthraquinone-2,6-disulfonate (AQDS), an oxygen-scavenging precursor molecule, were coated onto PET films under ambient laboratory conditions using a spiral-bar coating technique. Active SNAP-based coatings containing 0.08% w/w AQDS displayed an oxygen transmission rate of 0.04 ± 0.01 cm3 mil mâ 2 dayâ 1 atmâ 1; an improvement in oxygen barrier by an order of magnitude compared with comparable coatings produced using dip-coating. The spiral-bar coating technique also provided other important technical advantages over the previously used dip-coating method, including a reduction in the AQDS concentration required in the coating solution by almost an order of magnitude. The oxygen barrier performance provided by these single-layer active SNAP-based coatings approaches that provided by other far more sophisticated multi-layer plastic barrier materials produced using vacuum-deposition methods.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Materials Science
Nanotechnology
Authors
Andrew D. Scully, Qinghui Mao, Christopher J. Fell,