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Smart coatings in pipeline

An imaginative approach to polymer surface coating has produced a sustainable way to remove mercury from water – while providing a wide range of protection including for preventing metal corrosion and solvent damage of plastic PVC pipes.

The smart coating, made from low-cost waste chemicals from oil refining and other sources, also can prevent acid and water damage of concrete surfaces and be repaired in-situ by a simple heating process, says Flinders University project leader Max Mann.

Flinders University PhD candidate Max Mann in the Chalker Lab.

“Made easily from elemental sulfur and dicyclopentadiene (DCPD is a by-product of petroleum refining), this new coating is multi-functional which gives us wide scope to use it in a wide range of useful ways and for longer lasting industrial products and components,” says Flinders University PhD candidate Mr Mann, lead author of the .

“This exciting new area of research extends fundamental chemistry to several practical applications.”

“The method for making the coating is safer than methods previously used for related coatings. The team developed a lower temperature process that prevented runaway reactions,” adds co-author University of Liverpool researcher Dr Bowen Zhang.

Along with its protective powers against corrosion, solvent damage and acid and water damage, the research found the active coating can capture toxic metals such as mercury.

Cover artwork features the ‘hot’ new article in Polymer Chemistry journal. Courtesy Max Mann, Flinders University.

The coating is repairable and scratches and damage can be prepared by the simple application of heat, the Flinders-Liverpool team found.

This process is possible because of the coating’s chemical structure which allows sulfur-sulfur bonds to be broken and re-formed.

Flinders University chemistry Professor Justin Chalker says the research is a significant step forward in multi-functional coatings.

Matthew Flinders Professor Justin Chalker was Innovator the Year winner (Novatech sponsor) in the 2021 SA Science Excellence and Innovation Awards. photo (Professor Justin Chalker Lab): courtesy Randy Larcombe, Department of Innovation and Skills (SA Government, 2021)

“The unique chemical composition of the smart coating enables protection of substrates, active removal of toxic mercury species from water and oil, and is repairable which ensures its sustainability,” says Matthew Flinders Professor Chalker, from the Institute of Nanoscale Science and Technology at Flinders University.

“The coating is solvent resistant and can also remove mercury from oil and water mixtures, which is of importance to remediation in the petroleum and gas industry.”

The article, (2022) by Maximilian Mann, Bowen Zhang, Samuel J Tonkin, Christopher T Gibson, Zhongfan Jia, Tom Hasell and Justin M Chalker is the cover story in Polymer Chemistry (Royal Society of Chemistry) DOI: 10.1039/D1PY01416A

Mr Mann conducted part of this study in the UK on an exchange at Dr Tom Hasell’s University of Liverpool lab as part of ongoing collaboration between the Chalker Lab and Hasell Lab in Liverpool.

Acknowledgements: The project was funded by the Australian Research Council (DP200100090)

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