Antifouling Coatings: Marine Chemistry of the Underwater Hul ... - cover

Antifouling Coatings: Marine Chemistry of the Underwater Hul ...

Richard Hobbs

  • 07 april 2026
  • 9783565390410
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The moment a massive container ship slides into the ocean, a relentless biological attack begins. Bacteria, algae, and barnacles immediately colonize the steel hull, creating a rough biofilm that drastically increases hydrodynamic drag. This "fouling" can force a ship to burn up to forty percent more fuel just to maintain its schedule, threatening the razor-thin margins of global shipping. To combat this marine invasion, logistics companies rely on aggressive chemical warfare. For decades, shipyards applied paints loaded with tributyltin (TBT) and heavy copper, designed to slowly leach biocides into the water and poison any organism attempting to attach. While highly effective for shipping speed, these toxic plumes decimated coastal ecosystems, causing spontaneous sex mutations in marine snail populations and triggering a global environmental ban. Dive beneath the waterline of the shipping industry. Explore the frantic chemical race to develop friction-release hydrogels that can shed marine life without permanently poisoning the world's oceans.

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