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Chemists create 'water armor' that prevents stains and germs from sticking to clothing ‪

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CitrixNews Staff
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Chemists create 'water armor' that prevents stains and germs from sticking to clothing ‪
An illustration of a series of round spheres inside a larger blue bubble next to bright green grass. A new protective coating created by Chinese scientists coaxes water molecules into an armor-like configuration that largely prevents stains from forming on fabric. (Image credit: Communications Chemistry / Wang et al.) Share this article 0 Join the conversation Add us as a preferred source on Google Newsletter Subscribe to our newsletter

Scientists have invented a self-cleaning coating that prevents stains from food, oil or dirt from sticking to a fabric's surface, making the spots easy to remove without detergent or large amounts of water. The coating, which creates a protective ultrathin layer of water its developers call "molecular water armor," could reduce the water and electricity demand of household laundry by over 80%, new research suggests.

Washing clothes is a basic necessity of everyday life, but laundry has a huge environmental footprint because it produces vast amounts of wastewater. A single cycle in a household washing machine uses 10.5 to 16 gallons (40 to 60 liters) of clean water, while the detergents required to remove stains promote the release of microplastics from synthetic fibers and leave chemical residues in the discharged water.

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Various comparisons of stains on coated versus un-coated fabrics when washed with water or detergent. Even without detergent, the new coating helped remove stains with great efficiency.

(Image credit: Communications Chemistry / Wang et al.)Related stories

Article Sources

Wang, R., Wang, H., Chen, Y., Cheng, C., & Wang, D. (2026). A versatile self-cleaning fabric coating as a detergent-free laundry product. Communications Chemistry, 9(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s42004-026-01942-7

TOPICS Victoria AtkinsonVictoria AtkinsonLive Science Contributor

Victoria Atkinson is a freelance science journalist, specializing in chemistry and its interface with the natural and human-made worlds. Currently based in York (UK), she formerly worked as a science content developer at the University of Oxford, and later as a member of the Chemistry World editorial team. Since becoming a freelancer, Victoria has expanded her focus to explore topics from across the sciences and has also worked with Chemistry Review, Neon Squid Publishing and the Open University, amongst others. She has a DPhil in organic chemistry from the University of Oxford.

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Originally reported by Live Science