Skip to main content

Nanooze Magazine

Exploring the world
of science and nanotechnology...

menu

  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Blog
  • Meet a
    Scientist
  • Downloads
  • Glossary
  • Contact
  • Search

In this section:

  • About Us
  • Articles
  • Blog
  • Meet a Scientist
  • Downloads
  • Glossary
  • Subscribe
  • Search
Home → Blog → Skating Along

Skating Along

Posted on November 8, 2009 by Lynn Charles Rathbun

No doubt. Sliding down the street on a layer of ice is fun until you find yourself doing it in a car.  All by yourself, it might be a tough stop but for a while it is pretty cool.  Ice on the wing of a plane is bad news, and that is why in the winter time, airplanes need to be ‘de-iced’ which is where they pull the plane over and a person squirts lots of soapy stuff all over the plane.

Scientists from the University of Pittsburgh have been looking at nanoparticles as a way to prevent ice build up on just about any surface.  These particles make the surface ‘superhydrophobic’ meaning that they repeal water like a duck’s back (and in fact that is the same kind of idea).  Ice is different than liquid water so these scientists needed to make a special coating, mainly a coating with nanoparticles that were less than 50 nanometers in size.  That means that about 2000 could fit across the width of a hair.  Outdoors this special nanoparticle coating prevented ice build up in chilly Pittsburgh. (see video).  So someday if this stuff can be made cheap enough it could be a great solution for a lot of surfaces.

← Up, Up and Away Save That Pond Scum →

Blog Archives

Featured Posts

A Tiny Forest?

Everything we do in science is always predictable, right? It always comes out the way we plan it.... read more

Bonds Hold Atoms Together

The bonds that hold atoms together to form molecules are called covalent bonds. They are pretty... read more

View All Featured

Related Resources

  • NNIN Education Site
  • NNIN Nanotechnology Education Resouce Database
  • Education Portal at Nano.gov (US Government)
  • NISENet – Nanoscale Informal Sciece Education Network
  • Nano4me — the Nanotechnology Applications and Career Knowledge Network

Print Issues

Print issues of Nanooze are distributed free to classrooms on request.

Credits

Prof. Carl Batt Cornell University, Editor
Emily Maletz, Emily Maletz Graphic Design, Designer
Lynn Rathbun, CNF Laboratory Manager

Cornell University ©2013
Rights restricted.

Disclaimer

Nanooze is a project of the Cornell Nanoscale Facility part of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure (NNCI).