Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite

The review deals with the reasons for the drastic difference between the theoretically derived expectations regarding the mechanical properties of polymer nanocomposites and the experimentally obtained results. It is assumed that the most probable reason is the fact that we hardly deal with true nan...

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Main Author: Stoyko Fakirov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: KeAi Communications Co., Ltd. 2018-10-01
Series:Advanced Industrial and Engineering Polymer Research
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542504817300155
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spelling doaj-c047502b22934d7e9e20a9b82b04d9f42021-02-02T08:14:35ZengKeAi Communications Co., Ltd.Advanced Industrial and Engineering Polymer Research2542-50482018-10-01114047Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocompositeStoyko Fakirov0Centre for Advanced Composite Materials, Department of Mechanical Engineering, The University of Auckland, Building 903 Room 240, 314 Khyber Pass Road, Newmarket Campus, Private Bag 92019, Auckland 1142, New ZealandThe review deals with the reasons for the drastic difference between the theoretically derived expectations regarding the mechanical properties of polymer nanocomposites and the experimentally obtained results. It is assumed that the most probable reason is the fact that we hardly deal with true nanocomposites because in the composites prepared via blending of polymer matrix with the reinforcing nano-size material the reinforcing elements are not the single nanoparticles but their aggregates with sizes in the micrometer range. This situation is due to the fact that currently there are not effective techniques for proper dispersion of nanomaterials into polymer matrix. The solution suggested is in avoiding the dispersion step in the composite preparation as the “concept of converting instead of adding” does. Two examples of true polymer nanocomposites – the nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and the nanofibrillar single polymer composites – are described. Keywords: Polymer nanocomposites, Dispersion problem, Mechanical properties, Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer composites, Nanofibrillar single polymer compositehttp://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542504817300155
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Stoyko Fakirov
spellingShingle Stoyko Fakirov
Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
Advanced Industrial and Engineering Polymer Research
author_facet Stoyko Fakirov
author_sort Stoyko Fakirov
title Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
title_short Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
title_full Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
title_fullStr Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
title_full_unstemmed Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – Examples of true polymer nanocomposite
title_sort nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and single polymer composites via the “converting instead of adding” concept – examples of true polymer nanocomposite
publisher KeAi Communications Co., Ltd.
series Advanced Industrial and Engineering Polymer Research
issn 2542-5048
publishDate 2018-10-01
description The review deals with the reasons for the drastic difference between the theoretically derived expectations regarding the mechanical properties of polymer nanocomposites and the experimentally obtained results. It is assumed that the most probable reason is the fact that we hardly deal with true nanocomposites because in the composites prepared via blending of polymer matrix with the reinforcing nano-size material the reinforcing elements are not the single nanoparticles but their aggregates with sizes in the micrometer range. This situation is due to the fact that currently there are not effective techniques for proper dispersion of nanomaterials into polymer matrix. The solution suggested is in avoiding the dispersion step in the composite preparation as the “concept of converting instead of adding” does. Two examples of true polymer nanocomposites – the nanofibrillar polymer–polymer and the nanofibrillar single polymer composites – are described. Keywords: Polymer nanocomposites, Dispersion problem, Mechanical properties, Nanofibrillar polymer–polymer composites, Nanofibrillar single polymer composite
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542504817300155
work_keys_str_mv AT stoykofakirov nanofibrillarpolymerpolymerandsinglepolymercompositesviatheconvertinginsteadofaddingconceptexamplesoftruepolymernanocomposite
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