Significant efforts have been made to create Janus fabrics including designing their structure, employing electrospraying and electrospinning, and applying chemical and physical surface treatments to enhance the effective and directed transport of water. In this paper, a Janus industrial fabric with desirable properties such as one-way water transfer, fog collection, mechanical durability, and flame resistance was prepared. The creation of superhydrophobic surfaces on polyester fabrics involved the attachment of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (NTO) onto the fabric using aluminum phosphate (AP) adhesive and then coating with fluoroacrylate polymer (F) as a low-energy surface material.
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