Evaluation of the Impact of Parylene C Deposition Method on the Functional Properties of Fabrics
Abstract
:1. Introduction
- surface properties (especially hydrophobicity), which may be important when using textiles in special clothing (e.g., jackets, coats, uniforms for firefighters, rescue), special equipment (e.g., backpacks, tarpaulins), packaging used in high-humidity conditions (e.g., during transport).
- barrier properties protecting against the harmful effects of liquid chemicals (e.g., acids and bases), which may be important when using textiles in protective clothing or packaging used in places where these substances occur (e.g., chemical or medical laboratories).
- electrostatic properties, which is important when using these textiles in areas where there is a risk of explosion by means of uncontrolled charge transfer in the form of a spark (e.g., gas stations, mills, sawmills, mines and others).
- properties affecting heat and mass transfer through them, affecting the use of textiles as a barrier between environments with different temperatures and pressures. When used in clothing and footwear, these properties have a significant impact on ensuring the heat balance between a person and the environment in which he or she lives and protecting him or her from hypothermia (in cold environments) or from overheating (in hot environments). In other applications (e.g., packaging), these properties may contribute to ensuring the thermal safety of packaged products.
- flammability properties that may be important for textiles that may come into direct contact with flame (e.g., firefighting, rescue and clothing and equipment for metallurgical industry).
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Materials
2.2. Methods
2.2.1. Parylene C Coating Method
2.2.2. The Influence of Coating on Structural Properties of Fabrics
X-ray Computed Tomography, Micro-CT
2.2.3. The Influence of Coating on the Wettability and Tightness of Fabrics
Contact Angle
Spray Test
Chemical Liquids Penetration Test
Air Permeability
2.2.4. The Influence of Coating on Electrostatic Properties of Fabrics
Charge Decay, Surface Resistance and Vertical Resistance
2.2.5. The Influence of Coating on Thermal Insulation Properties of Fabrics
Thermal Conductivity Coefficient
Thermal Imaging
2.2.6. The Influence of Coating on Flammability of Fabrics
Limiting Oxygen Index
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. The Influence of Coating on Structural Properties of Fabrics
3.2. The Influence of Coating on the Wettability and Tightness of Fabrics
3.2.1. Contact Angle
3.2.2. Spray Test
3.2.3. Chemical Liquids Penetration Test
3.2.4. Air Permeability
3.3. The Influence of Coating on Electrostatic Properties of Fabrics
3.3.1. Charge Decay
3.3.2. Surface and Vertical Resistance
3.4. The Influence of Coating on Thermal Insulation Properties of Fabrics
3.4.1. Thermal Conductivity Coefficient
3.4.2. Thermal Imaging
3.5. The Influence of Coating on Flammability of Fabrics
4. Conclusions
- According to the results of micro-CT analysis, the Parylene C deposition method used is a controlled process in terms of coating thickness on textile substrates. Despite the complicated geometric structure of textile substrates, the results confirmed that both assumed average thicknesses of Parylene C coatings on fabrics (15 μm and 30 μm) were similar to the actual ones. Larger differences between the assumed and actual average thickness of the Parylene C coating were observed in the case of deposition of the thinner coating.
- Micro-CT 3D visualizations of fabrics (Figure 11) showed that in the case of deposition of a 15 μm Parylene C coating on the fabric surface, the coating is discontinuous because a significant part of Parylene C penetrates the fabrics’ structure, especially those characterized by higher porosity (Figure 9). Deposition of a thicker coating of Parylene C (30 μm) results in the formation of a more extensive and continuous layer on the surface of fabrics, especially those made of filament yarns.
- Wetting tests showed that the deposition of even a thinner coating of Parylene C (15 μm) gives the fabrics’ surface a hydrophobic character (contact angle values range from 124° to 139°). The highest contact angle (139°) was found for the red fabric, which is due to the fact that it was hydrophobic-finished before modification with Parylene C. The spray test results (Figure 14) showed that with the exception of this red hydrophobic-finished fabric, the deposited Parylene C coatings cause significantly lower water absorption by fabrics compared to unmodified fabrics (water absorption is lower by 71% to 78% depending on the fabric). Generally speaking, applied deposition of Parylene C is an effective method of hydrophobizing the fabrics’ surfaces, including fabrics with a high water wettability. The results of chemical liquids penetration through fabrics correlate with the results of the spray test. Deposited coatings of Parylene C cause much less acid penetration through fabrics compared to unmodified fabrics (H2SO4 penetration is lower from 83% to 97% depending on the fabric). This confirms the high chemical resistance of Parylene C applied to fabrics.
- Depending on the type of yarn the fabrics were made of (continuous or staple fibres and more or less porous), the Parylene C deposition had a different effect on the air permeability of the textiles (Figure 17). In the case of fabrics made of continuous fibres (orange and yellow), the factor determining the increase in air permeability of modified fabrics was the phenomenon of yarn compression, which increased the air flow through the fabrics (from 49% to 231% depending on the fabric and coating thickness). In the case of fabrics made of staple fibres (red and green), the twisted and more stiff yarns did not undergo compression during modification with Parylene C. The main factor determining the decrease in air permeability of these fabrics due to their modification was the deposition of Parylene C in the yarns’ structure, reducing free spaces between the fibres, increasing flow resistance and ultimately reducing their air permeability (from 9% to 66% depending on the fabric and coating thickness).
- Deposited coatings of Parylene C significantly influenced the electrostatic properties of only the orange fabric (made of basalt fibres), causing the decay half-time of the electric charge to drop below 4 s (T50 < 4 s qualifies the products for use in areas where there is a risk of explosion). The remaining three fabrics in the unmodified version and those with a Parylene C coating meet this safety criterion. The results of surface and vertical resistance do not change the category of fabrics as electrical insulators (both resistances for unmodified fabrics and fabrics with a Parylene C coating reached values above 106 Ω).
- Based on the results of thermal insulation properties tests, fabrics coated with Parylene C are characterized by a higher thermal conductivity coefficient than unmodified fabrics (the coefficient increases with the increase in coating thickness). These results were confirmed by thermal imaging, according to which, in particular, the deposition of a thicker coating of Parylene C (30 μm) contributes to a significantly greater increase in the fabric heating rate Rh compared to unmodified fabrics.
- The flammability test results showed that in the case of all aramids fibre fabrics, the Parylene C deposition method increases the LOI value of these fabrics, which means improving their flame retardancy properties. Samples of unmodified basalt fabric characterized by exceptionally high flame resistance retained this feature also after coating with Parylene C and can be classified as non-combustible materials.
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Fabric Name | Composition | Thickness (a) [mm] | Mass per Unit Area (b) [g·m−2] | Weave | Warp Density [mm−1] | Weft Density [mm−1] | Total Porosity (c) [%] | Yarn Porosity (c) [%] |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
red | hydrophobic-finished meta-aramid | 0.37 | 233 | Twill | 3.01 | 2.25 | 66 | 47 |
green | meta-aramid | 0.36 | 175 | Plain | 2.57 | 2.74 | 67 | 45 |
orange | basalt | 0.50 | 380 | Plain | 0.82 | 0.89 | 45 | 11 |
yellow | para-aramid | 0.45 | 214 | Plain | 0.62 | 0.64 | 66 | 58 |
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Miśkiewicz, P.; Puszkarz, A.K.; Machnowski, W.; Nosal, A. Evaluation of the Impact of Parylene C Deposition Method on the Functional Properties of Fabrics. Materials 2024, 17, 4073. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17164073
Miśkiewicz P, Puszkarz AK, Machnowski W, Nosal A. Evaluation of the Impact of Parylene C Deposition Method on the Functional Properties of Fabrics. Materials. 2024; 17(16):4073. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17164073
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiśkiewicz, Pamela, Adam K. Puszkarz, Waldemar Machnowski, and Andrzej Nosal. 2024. "Evaluation of the Impact of Parylene C Deposition Method on the Functional Properties of Fabrics" Materials 17, no. 16: 4073. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17164073
APA StyleMiśkiewicz, P., Puszkarz, A. K., Machnowski, W., & Nosal, A. (2024). Evaluation of the Impact of Parylene C Deposition Method on the Functional Properties of Fabrics. Materials, 17(16), 4073. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma17164073