A New Way to Remove Ice Buildup
without Power or Chemicals
Passive solar-powered system could prevent freezing on airplanes, wind turbines, power lines, and other surfaces.
By David L. Chandler, MIT News Office
Passive solar-powered system could prevent freezing on airplanes, wind turbines, power lines, and other surfaces.
By David L. Chandler, MIT News Office
August 31, 2018 -- From airplane
wings to overhead power lines to the giant blades of wind turbines, a buildup
of ice can cause problems ranging from impaired performance all the way to
catastrophic failure. But preventing that buildup usually requires
energy-intensive heating systems or chemical sprays that are environmentally
harmful. Now, MIT researchers have developed a completely passive,
solar-powered way of combating ice buildup.
The system is remarkably simple,
based on a three-layered material that can be applied or even sprayed onto the
surfaces to be treated. It collects solar radiation, converts it to heat, and
spreads that heat around so that the melting is not just confined to the areas
exposed directly to the sunlight. And, once applied, it requires no further
action or power source. It can even do its de-icing work at night, using
artificial lighting.
The new system is described today
in the journal Science Advances, in a paper by MIT associate professor
of mechanical engineering Kripa Varanasi and postdocs Susmita Dash and Jolet de
Ruiter.
“Icing is a major problem for
aircraft, for wind turbines, power lines, offshore oil platforms, and many
other places,” Varanasi
says. “The conventional ways of getting around it are de-icing sprays or by
heating, but those have issues.”
The usual de-icing sprays for
aircraft and other applications use ethylene glycol, a chemical that is
environmentally unfriendly. Airlines don’t like to use active heating, both for
cost and safety reasons. Varanasi
and other researchers have investigated the use of superhydrophobic surfaces to
prevent icing passively, but those coatings can be impaired by frost formation,
which tends to fill the microscopic textures that give the surface its
ice-shedding properties.
As an alternate line of inquiry, Varanasi and his team
considered the energy given off by the sun. They wanted to see, he says,
whether “there is a way to capture that heat and use it in a passive approach.”
They found that there was.
It’s not necessary to produce
enough heat to melt the bulk of the ice that forms, the team found. All that’s
needed is for the boundary layer, right where the ice meets the surface, to
melt enough to create a thin layer of water, which will make the surface
slippery enough so any ice will just slide right off. This is what the team has
achieved with the three-layered material they’ve developed.
Layer by layer
The top layer is an absorber, which
traps incoming sunlight and converts it to heat. The material the team used is
highly efficient, absorbing 95 percent of the incident sunlight, and losing
only 3 percent to re-radiation, Varanasi
says.
In principle, that layer could in
itself help to prevent frost formation, but with two limitations: It would only
work in the areas directly in sunlight, and much of the heat would be lost back
into the substrate material — the airplane wing or power line, for example —
and would not help with the de-icing.
So, to compensate for the
localization, the team added a spreader layer — a very thin layer of aluminum,
just 400 micrometers thick, which is heated by the absorber layer above it and
very efficiently spreads that heat out laterally to cover the entire surface.
The material was selected to have “thermal response that is fast enough so that
the heating takes place faster than the freezing,” Varanasi says.
Finally, the bottom layer is simply
foam insulation, to keep any of that heat from being wasted downward and keep
it where it’s needed, at the surface.
“In addition to passive de-icing,
the photothermal trap stays at an elevated temperature, thus preventing
ice build-up altogether,” Dash says.
The three layers, all made of
inexpensive commercially available material, are then bonded together, and can
be bonded to the surface that needs to be protected. For some applications, the
materials could instead be sprayed onto a surface, one layer at a time, the
researchers say.
The team carried out extensive
tests, including real-world outdoor testing of the materials and detailed
laboratory measurements, to prove the effectiveness of the system.
“The use of photothermal absorbers
is a smart idea and straightforward to implement,” says Manish Tiwari, a
professor of nanoengineering at University College London, who was not
associated with this research. “Scalability of these approaches and thinking about
appropriate packaging, specific weight, etc., of the de-icing layer are
important practical challenges going ahead, especially when it comes to the
aerospace application. The paper also opens up intriguing possibilities around
smart and flexible thermal packaging, and thermal metamaterials research to
realize its full potential. Overall, an excellent step forward,” he says.
The system could find even wider
commercial uses, such as panels to prevent icing on roofs of homes, schools,
and other buildings, Varanasi
adds. The team is planning to continue work on the system, testing it for
longevity and for optimal methods of application. But the basic system could
essentially be applied almost immediately for some uses, especially stationary
applications, he says.
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