TY - JOUR
T1 - Bio‐Templated Silver Nanopatterns for Photothermal and Antifogging Coatings
AU - Swarnalok, De
AU - Nguyen, Hoang M
AU - Zou, Fangxin
AU - Basarir, Fevzihan
AU - Mousavi, Maryam
AU - Mäkinen, Kristiina
AU - Kostiainen, Mauri A
AU - Vapaavuori, Jaana
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - Transparent photothermal coatings based on plasmonic noble metals often face a trade-off between achieved temperatures and transmittances. This challenge arises from the fact that plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs), which rely on their size and structures, selectively absorb light of various wavelengths and convert it into heat. In the cases of randomly arranged plasmonic NPs, absorbances are predominantly in the visible range, leading to lowered transmittances. In this work, the self-assembly behavior of a biotemplate containing flexible potato virus A (PVA) is used to produce network-like surface patterns with controllable intermittent vacancies. These templates effectively anchor silver nanoparticles (AgNPs), forming dense arrays of plasmonic hotspots interspersed with vacant regions. With this approach, a temperature increase of 21 degrees C above ambient temperature under 1-sun radiation is achieved while maintaining a visible light transmittance as high as 78% measured at 550 nm wavelength. The PVA biotemplated AgNPs show excellent potential as antifogging coating, exhibiting 2-3 times faster defogging rates compared to uncoated samples in both indoor and outdoor conditions. Overall, a platform is presented for biotemplating metal NPs, the development of long-range surface patterns with controlled vacancies, and the demonstration of transparent photothermal activity with an antifogging application.In this study, a glass substrate patterned with dense arrays of silver nanoparticles templated on an interconnected network of flexible virus nanoparticles is developed. The templated substrate demonstrates outstanding photothermal performance without compromising excellent light transmittance. Additionally, it displays highly efficient defogging capabilities in various environmental conditions, including both indoor and outdoor settings.image
AB - Transparent photothermal coatings based on plasmonic noble metals often face a trade-off between achieved temperatures and transmittances. This challenge arises from the fact that plasmonic nanoparticles (NPs), which rely on their size and structures, selectively absorb light of various wavelengths and convert it into heat. In the cases of randomly arranged plasmonic NPs, absorbances are predominantly in the visible range, leading to lowered transmittances. In this work, the self-assembly behavior of a biotemplate containing flexible potato virus A (PVA) is used to produce network-like surface patterns with controllable intermittent vacancies. These templates effectively anchor silver nanoparticles (AgNPs), forming dense arrays of plasmonic hotspots interspersed with vacant regions. With this approach, a temperature increase of 21 degrees C above ambient temperature under 1-sun radiation is achieved while maintaining a visible light transmittance as high as 78% measured at 550 nm wavelength. The PVA biotemplated AgNPs show excellent potential as antifogging coating, exhibiting 2-3 times faster defogging rates compared to uncoated samples in both indoor and outdoor conditions. Overall, a platform is presented for biotemplating metal NPs, the development of long-range surface patterns with controlled vacancies, and the demonstration of transparent photothermal activity with an antifogging application.In this study, a glass substrate patterned with dense arrays of silver nanoparticles templated on an interconnected network of flexible virus nanoparticles is developed. The templated substrate demonstrates outstanding photothermal performance without compromising excellent light transmittance. Additionally, it displays highly efficient defogging capabilities in various environmental conditions, including both indoor and outdoor settings.image
KW - 216 Materials engineering
KW - Antifogging coating
KW - Biohybrid functional material
KW - Photothermal metamaterial
KW - Plant virus nanotechnology
KW - Silver nanoparticles
U2 - 10.1002/admi.202300828
DO - 10.1002/admi.202300828
M3 - Article
SN - 2196-7350
JO - Advanced Materials Interfaces
JF - Advanced Materials Interfaces
ER -