Issue 7, 2012

Synthesis of polymer/inorganic nanocomposite films using highly porous inorganic scaffolds

Abstract

Polymeric/inorganic nanocomposite films have been fabricated through a combination of flame-spray-pyrolysis (FSP) made inorganic scaffold and surface initiated polymerization of cyanoacrylate. The highly porous structure of pristine SnO2 films allows the uptake of cyanoacrylate and the polymerization is surface initiated by the water adsorbed onto the SnO2 surface. Scanning electron microscopy study reveals a nonlinear increase in the composite particle size and the film thickness with polymerization time. The structural change is rather homogeneous throughout the whole layer. The composite is formed mainly by an increase of the particle size and not by just filling the existing pores. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy imaging shows SnO2 nanoparticles embedded in the polymeric matrix, constituting the nanocomposite material. Thermogravimetric analysis indicates that the porosity of the nanocomposite films decreases from 98% to 75%, resulting in a significant enhancement of the hardness of the films. DC conductivity measurements conducted in situ on the nanocomposite layer suggest a gradual increase in the layer resistance, pointing to a loss of connectivity between the SnO2 primary particles as the polymerization proceeds.

Graphical abstract: Synthesis of polymer/inorganic nanocomposite films using highly porous inorganic scaffolds

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
19 Dec 2011
Accepted
27 Jan 2012
First published
30 Jan 2012

Nanoscale, 2012,4, 2326-2332

Synthesis of polymer/inorganic nanocomposite films using highly porous inorganic scaffolds

H. Zhang, M. Popp, A. Hartwig and L. Mädler, Nanoscale, 2012, 4, 2326 DOI: 10.1039/C2NR12029A

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