Dispersions of unmodified nanoparticles (titanium dioxide, hydroxyapatite) were prepared by redispersion of nanoparticle powders in organic solvents using an ultrasound treatment. The dispersion quality was judged by dynamic light scattering (DLS) measurements and visual evaluation. Whereas "bad" solvents led to no or unstable dispersions with large particle diameters, dispersions made from the "good" solvents consisted of particles with relatively small diameters and were stable for several days or longer. For titanium dioxide, mixtures from four of the "good" solvents identified after first screening of a large set of solvents were prepared and tested as dispersion agent. Thus obtained dispersions showed superior properties compared to the previous dispersions, with small particles sizes and good long-time stability. Based on a rating of solvent quality and by calculation using the software HSPiP v3, the Hansen solubility parameters of the particles were then determined. Subsequently, entirely new solvent mixtures that could best fit these parameters were selected and found to also exhibit suitable properties as dispersion agent for the nanoparticles. The same iterative and quantitative approach worked also for the preparation of good and stable dispersions of hydroxyapatite. All results show that this is a promising methodology to disperse inorganic nanoparticles into suited organic solvents, for instance for the preparation of new polymeric nanocomposites. Furthermore, the method can be used to indirectly characterize the surface chemistry of nanoparticles.
Titania microspheres with narrow size distribution and diameters of about 1 µm were prepared and subsequently functionalized using surface‐initiated atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) of N‐isopropylacrylamide. The ATRP initiator was immobilized on the particle surface via acylation of surface hydroxyl groups with α‐bromoisobutyryl bromide. Subsequently, an established ATRP reaction system was used for the preparation of titania surface‐grafted poly(N‐isopropylacrylamide) (PNiPAAm). Characterization was performed with electron microscopies, X‐ray diffraction, infrared spectroscopy and dynamic light scattering. It was found that the particle size in aqueous dispersions changed reversibly with temperature as expected for a shell of PNiPAAm, a polymer with a lower critical solution temperature at 32 °C. This confirmed the successful preparation of functional, stimuli‐responsive TiO2 microparticles via a straightforward controlled surface‐initiated polymerization method.
Summary: Membranes made of high permeable fluorinated aromatic polyimide synthesized from 6FDA (4,4'-hexafluoroisopropylidene diphthalic anhydride) and 4MPD (2,3,5,6-tetramethyl-1,4-phenylene diamine) have been thermally treated to examine their aging behaviour at high temperature. The aging process was investigated by means of gas permeation tests, IR spectroscopy and thermogravimetric analysis combined with mass spectral analysis of the gaseous decomposition products. Up to around 400 8C thin films of the material show no major degradation but changes in color, flexibility and separation characteristics for O 2 /N 2 were observed.
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