Cotton and Polyester Fabrics Plasma Coated with Hydrogenated
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cation. Whether a liquid is repelled or absorbed depends on the chemical composition
and the morphology of the surface [35]. Previous studies determined that oxygen plasma
pretreatment is more effective than argon and hydrogen for the super-hydrophilic/ultra-
hydrophobic properties for a-C:H film layers [27]. The textile structure and construction
depend on the type of weave patter, g/m2 of fabric, type of the fiber content, fiber fineness,
and also the yarn parameters like the twist factors [36]. Textile materials consequently have
a complex surface composed of the inter-fiber/filament space, inter-yarn space and the pore
size distribution. Therefore, plasma treatment of textile fabrics is more challenging than for
solid polymeric materials [37, 38].
The present study investigates a-C:H films (30 and 60 nm thick) on cotton, polyethy-
lene terephthalate (PET), and cotton-PET mixture (COT/PET, 50:50) fabrics that serve as
intermediate layer for subsequent impregnation with immortelle oil and water glass. Be-
fore the textile substrates are coated via PECVD using acetylene (C2H2) an oxygen (O2)
plasma was previously applied for cleaning and activation. Overall the three textile types
as pure, oxygen treated and coated with two a-C:H coatings are individually refined or
combined with immortelle oil (IO) and water glass (WG) in preparation for enhanced re-
pellency properties to suppress mosquito attacks that cause vector-borne diseases.
15.2
COATING PROCESS AND ANALYTICS
The used PECVD vacuum system is sized 600 x 600 x 750 mm and suitable for coating
sensitive samples as the temperature does not exceed 40°C [16 - 18]. The fabric samples
cotton, PET and COT/PET were cut into pieces of 210 x 279 mm. Each fabric sample is
fixed along short edge top and bottom between two full-length aluminum poster clamps.
To avoid swinging, the bottom clip is extra weighted. The as prepared fabric samples are
mounted with the top clip in the chamber freely hanging on rotating rods, which in turn are
mounted on a rotating plate. This planetary-like system is operated with 2 rpm to ensure
uniform coating. The deposition process is described in detail in [16]. In brief: Exposition
to plasma is conducted at 10-3 Pa with firstly O2 (10 min, 1 Pa, 200 W) and subsequently
with C2H2 (15 and 30 min, 0.65 Pa, 107 W, deposition rate 2 nm/min). This has proven to
be very efficient for textile fabric treatments, because the mean free path in the gas phase
is higher, so that gas-textile collisions are favored over gas-gas collisions [36]. The a-C:H
coated fabrics are treated afterwards using a pad-dry-cure procedure (Benz pad-dry sys-
tem, Germany), impregnated with a finishing bath containing 10 g/L WG and/or 5 g/L IO,
squeezed, dried at 110°C for 2 min, and finally cured 4 min at 150°C [39].
The morphology of the a-C:H coated textiles were investigated by scanning electron
microscopy (SEM, Philips SEM515), especially to check the quality of plasma treatments
on the fibers. The air permeability was evaluated with a SDL ATLAS M021S in standard
atmosphere. According to ISO 9237:1995 the rate of air flow which passes perpendicularly
through a test surface area of 5 cm² under an air pressure drop of 100 Pa was measured
[40]. The test was repeated at different locations on the sample at least five times and aver-
aged. The tensile properties of the fabrics were performed according to ISO 13934-1:2013
for the determination of maximum force using a strip method strength tester/tensiometer