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Applications of hybrid organic–inorganic nanocomposites
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229
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2005
Year
EngineeringHybrid Organic–inorganic NanocompositesChemistryPolymersMacromolecular EngineeringPolymer Nanostructured MaterialsMetal-organic PolyhedronHybrid MaterialsPolymer ChemistryMaterials ScienceDiversity-oriented SynthesisNanomanufacturingOrganic–inorganic Hybrid MaterialsOrganic Material ChemistryOrganic ComponentsNatural SciencesSelf-assemblyPolymer ScienceNanocompositeFunctional MaterialsPolymer HybridNanostructuresOrganic-inorganic Hybrid Material
Hybrid organic–inorganic materials, whose unique properties enable industrial applications, are currently produced mainly via conventional soft‑chemistry routes such as copolymerisation, sol‑gel encapsulation, and nanofiller functionalisation, but emerging academic strategies promise more complex, hierarchically organized architectures for future uses in optics, electronics, energy, and biomedicine. The study proposes that intelligent coding of new vectorial chemistry can direct the assembly of diverse nano‑objects into hierarchically organized hybrid architectures.
Organic–inorganic hybrid materials do not represent only a creative alternative to design new materials and compounds for academic research, but their improved or unusual features allow the development of innovative industrial applications. Nowadays, most of the hybrid materials that have already entered the market are synthesised and processed by using conventional soft chemistry based routes developed in the eighties. These processes are based on: a) the copolymerisation of functional organosilanes, macromonomers, and metal alkoxides, b) the encapsulation of organic components within sol–gel derived silica or metallic oxides, c) the organic functionalisation of nanofillers, nanoclays or other compounds with lamellar structures, etc. The chemical strategies (self-assembly, nanobuilding block approaches, hybrid MOF (Metal Organic Frameworks), integrative synthesis, coupled processes, bio-inspired strategies, etc.) offered nowadays by academic research allow, through an intelligent tuned coding, the development of a new vectorial chemistry, able to direct the assembling of a large variety of structurally well defined nano-objects into complex hybrid architectures hierarchically organised in terms of structure and functions. Looking to the future, there is no doubt that these new generations of hybrid materials, born from the very fruitful activities in this research field, will open a land of promising applications in many areas: optics, electronics, ionics, mechanics, energy, environment, biology, medicine for example as membranes and separation devices, functional smart coatings, fuel and solar cells, catalysts, sensors, etc.
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