B.C. researcher says windshields, plane wings could be easily de-iced
KELOWNA, B.C. — A University of British Columbia engineer has led a study about a coating he helped develop to one day easily de-ice windshields, airplane wings and power lines.
Assistant professor Kevin Golovin of UBC’s Okanagan campus says the coating called low-interfacial toughness, or LIT, would first be used for automatic ice makers inside freezers.
He says ice in a mould in a freezer is melted with heat before it lands in a cup, and that uses up about a quarter of the appliance’s energy.
Golovin says a Michigan company is looking at using the coating in freezers to save energy by eliminating the whole heating step.


