TY - JOUR
T1 - Tick-inspired, self-healing, and strongly-adhesive coatings with biodegradability and phosphorus-free fire retardancy
AU - Wang, Cheng
AU - Huo, Siqi
AU - Ye, Guofeng
AU - Cao, Cheng Fei
AU - Hong, Min
AU - Pan, Ye Tang
AU - Song, Pingan
AU - Wang, Hao
AU - Wang, Tielin
AU - Liu, Zhitian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025
PY - 2026/7/20
Y1 - 2026/7/20
N2 - Although widely applied in diverse industries, conventional fire-retardant coatings generally suffer from poor adhesion and fire protection. These coatings are typically phosphorus-containing and non-recyclable, making their waste prone to causing environmental issues, e.g., bioaccumulation and (micro)plastic pollution. Inspired by the multi-non-covalent adhesion mechanism of ticks, we designed a strongly adhesive and self-healing coating (DCNC/40PEN) with superior fire protection by incorporating hydrogen bonding, π-π stacking, and cation-π interactions. Incorporating these interactions into a dynamic covalent network further imparts closed-loop recyclability and biodegradability to the coating. DCNC/40PEN can adhere to diverse substrates and self-heal at room temperature due to the non-covalent and covalent interactions within its structure. DCNC/40PEN features closed-loop recyclability and biodegradation because of its dynamic covalent network. Owing to the catalytic and crosslinking carbonization of sulfonate and Schiff base groups, phosphorus-free DCNC/40PEN delivers exceptional fire protection for various materials, e.g., wood, polymer foams, and steel. At a coating thickness of 100 μm, DCNC/40PEN significantly increased the limiting oxygen index and vertical combustion (UL-94) rating of wood to 35.0 % and V-0. The multifunctionality and sustainability of DCNC/40PEN enable it to outperform commercial and reported fire-retardant coatings and adhesives. This work presents an innovative design strategy for the next generation of sustainable, versatile fire-retardant coatings, accelerating “green” development.
AB - Although widely applied in diverse industries, conventional fire-retardant coatings generally suffer from poor adhesion and fire protection. These coatings are typically phosphorus-containing and non-recyclable, making their waste prone to causing environmental issues, e.g., bioaccumulation and (micro)plastic pollution. Inspired by the multi-non-covalent adhesion mechanism of ticks, we designed a strongly adhesive and self-healing coating (DCNC/40PEN) with superior fire protection by incorporating hydrogen bonding, π-π stacking, and cation-π interactions. Incorporating these interactions into a dynamic covalent network further imparts closed-loop recyclability and biodegradability to the coating. DCNC/40PEN can adhere to diverse substrates and self-heal at room temperature due to the non-covalent and covalent interactions within its structure. DCNC/40PEN features closed-loop recyclability and biodegradation because of its dynamic covalent network. Owing to the catalytic and crosslinking carbonization of sulfonate and Schiff base groups, phosphorus-free DCNC/40PEN delivers exceptional fire protection for various materials, e.g., wood, polymer foams, and steel. At a coating thickness of 100 μm, DCNC/40PEN significantly increased the limiting oxygen index and vertical combustion (UL-94) rating of wood to 35.0 % and V-0. The multifunctionality and sustainability of DCNC/40PEN enable it to outperform commercial and reported fire-retardant coatings and adhesives. This work presents an innovative design strategy for the next generation of sustainable, versatile fire-retardant coatings, accelerating “green” development.
KW - Phosphorus-free fire retardancy
KW - Strong adhesion
KW - Sustainability
KW - Vitrimer coating
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105020261227
U2 - 10.1016/j.jmst.2025.10.003
DO - 10.1016/j.jmst.2025.10.003
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:105020261227
SN - 1005-0302
VL - 260
SP - 229
EP - 240
JO - Journal of Materials Science and Technology
JF - Journal of Materials Science and Technology
ER -