Abstract
The study focuses on the synthesis of fluorinated polystyrene (F-PS) as a hydrophobic film coating and on the investigation of the consequent effects of thermal treatment time and treatment temperature on its contact angle. The fluorinated polystyrene is synthesized via Friedel-Crafts acylation of the benzoic rings by electrophilic substitution of trifluoroacetic anhydride in the presence of AlCl3 in an environment of dichloromethane as the aprotic solvent with a reaction temperature of 36°C. The reaction yielded fluorinated polystyrene characterized by a solid brown substance. FT-IR analysis of the substance had shown band peaks at 1150 cm-1, a wavenumber indicating the presence of fluorine in the synthesized material, which lowers its surface energy. SEM images of the F-PS show nucleation sites giving rise to hierarchical structures on the surface of the material due to the action of fluorination. The contact angle of fluorinated polystyrene, upon application of thermal treatment, increased to as much as 29.26% when compared to the unmodified polystyrene manifesting a preferentially more hydrophobic behavior. It was also found that the contact angle increases linearly with treatment temperature while statistical analysis shows that thermal treatment time has no significant effect on the hydrophobicity of the F- PS.
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