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Advances in Smart Coating Technologies for Wind Turbine Blade Protection: A Focus on Self-Healing and Anti-Erosion Performance

  • Mohamad Alsaadi
  • , Leon Mishnaevsky
  • , Edmond Francis Tobin
  • , Declan M. Devine
  • Technological University of the Shannon: Midland Midwest
  • Éire Composites Teo.
  • University of Technology- Iraq
  • Technical University of Denmark
  • South East Technological University

Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

Abstract

Leading-edge erosion (LEE) of wind-turbine blades, driven primarily by rain erosion, particulate erosion, and environmental ageing, remains one of the most pervasive causes of performance loss and maintenance cost in offshore and onshore wind farms. Self-healing coatings, which autonomously or semi-autonomously restore barriers and mechanical function after damage, promise a paradigm shift in blade protection by combining immediate impact resistance with in-service reparability. This review surveys the state of the art in self-healing coating technologies (intrinsic chemistries such as non-covalent interactions or dynamic covalent bonds; extrinsic systems including micro/nanocapsules and microvascular networks) and evaluates their suitability for anti-erosion, mechanical robustness, and multifunctional protection of leading edges. The outcomes of theoretical, experimental, modelling and field-oriented studies on the leading-edge protection and coating characterisation identify which self-healing concepts best meet the simultaneous requirements of toughness, adhesion, surface finish, and long-term durability of wind blade applications. Key gaps are highlighted, notably trade-offs between healing efficiency and mechanical toughness, challenges in large-area and sprayable application methods, and the need for standardised characterisation and testing of self-healing coating protocols. We propose a roadmap for targeted materials research, accelerated testing, and field trials. This review discusses recent studies to guide materials scientists and renewable-energy engineers toward promising routes to deployable, multifunctional, self-healing anti-erosion coatings, especially for wind-energy infrastructure.

Original languageEnglish
Article number2224
JournalJournal of Marine Science and Engineering
Volume13
Issue number12
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Dec 2025
Externally publishedYes

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy
    SDG 7 Affordable and Clean Energy

Keywords

  • dynamic covalent bonds
  • extrinsic coating systems
  • intrinsic coating systems
  • leading-edge erosion
  • microcapsule systems
  • polyurethane coatings
  • renewable energy materials
  • self-healing coatings
  • wind turbine blades

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