Anti-Fog Coatings For Spacesuit HelmetsA permanent and robust anti-fog coating was developed that is applied to the interior of polycarbonate spacesuit helmets. The coating is a mechanically resilient and permanent superhydrophilic (SHPL) layer produced by a two-step process consisting of a plasma processing pre-etch followed by the deposition of an optically transparent Diamond Like Carbon (DLC) coating to achieve an anti-fog, SHPL-DLC layer with Water Contact Angle (WCA) < 10°. The all-dry vacuum process consists of an oxygen plasma etching to engineer the surface of the polycarbonate, creating a well-controlled nanotextured morphology, which is key to the superhydrophilic properties, followed by vacuum deposited Plasma Enhanced Chemical Vapor Deposition (PECVD) DLC coating with high surface energy. The process is carried out at low temperatures compatible with polycarbonate materials and the two steps are performed back-to-back without breaking vacuum between steps. The process is readily scalable and compatible with large scale production volumes. The SHPL-DLC coating was tested for > 200 hours exposure using a breath simulator with no detrimental effect on the coating performance. The coating was also tested for exposure to cleaning fluids, IPA chemical exposure, adhesion testing per ASTM D3359, and abrasion resistance per MIL-E-12397 with no detrimental effects.
Document ID
20240004208
Acquisition Source
Johnson Space Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Mike McFarland (Acree Technologies (United States) Concord, California, United States)
Kelvin Wong (Acree Technologies (United States) Concord, California, United States)
Date Acquired
April 9, 2024
Subject Category
Engineering (General)
Report/Patent Number
ICES-2024-482
Meeting Information
Meeting: International Conference on Environmental Systems (ICES)