Publication | Closed Access
Organic–Inorganic Copolymerization for a Homogenous Composite without an Interphase Boundary
113
Citations
32
References
2019
Year
EngineeringPolymer NanocompositesChemistryPolymersPolymer MaterialIonic OligomersPolymer CompositesPolymer ChemistryMaterials SciencePolymer EngineeringBlock Co-polymersInterphase BoundarySelf-assemblyPolymer ScienceIonic Binding EffectPolymer CharacterizationNovel Organic-inorganic CompositesPolymer HybridPolymer Synthesis
Ionic oligomers and their crosslinking implies a possibility to produce novel organic-inorganic composites by copolymerization. Using organic acrylamide monomers and inorganic calcium phosphate oligomers as precursors, uniformly structured polyacrylamide (PAM)-calcium phosphate copolymer is prepared by an organic-inorganic copolymerization. In contrast to the previous PAM-based composites by mixing inorganic components into polymers, the copolymerized material has no interphase boundary owing to the homogenous incorporation of the organic and inorganic units at molecular level, resulting in a complete and continuous hybrid network. The participation of the ionic binding effect in the crosslinking process can substantially improve the mechanical strength; the copolymer can reach a modulus and hardness of 35.14±1.91 GPa and 1.34±0.09 GPa, respectively, which are far superior to any other PAM-based composites.
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