4 research outputs found
Tailoring of Textural Properties of 3D Reduced Graphene Oxide Composite Monoliths by Using Highly Crosslinked Polymer Particles toward Improved CO<sub>2</sub> Sorption
The main constraint on developing a full potential for
CO2 adsorption of 3D composite monoliths made of reduced
graphene oxide
(rGO) and polymer materials is the lack of control of their textural
properties, along with the diffusional limitation to the CO2 adsorption due to the pronounced polymers’ microporosity.
In this work, the textural properties of the composites were altered
by employing highly crosslinked polymer particles, synthesized by
emulsion polymerization in aqueous media. For that aim, waterborne
methyl methacrylate (MMA) particles were prepared, in which the crosslinking
was induced by using different quantities of divinyl benzene (DVB).
Afterward, these particles were combined with rGO platelets and subjected
to the reduction-induced self-assembly process. The resulting 3D monolithic
porous materials certainly presented improved textural properties,
in which the porosity and BET surface area were increased up to 100%
with respect to noncrosslinked composites. The crosslinked density
of MMA polymer particles was a key parameter controlling the porous
properties of the composites. Consequently, higher CO2 uptake
than that of neat GO structures and composites made of noncrosslinked
MMA polymer particles was attained. This work demonstrates that a
proper control of the microstructure of the polymer particles and
their facile introduction within rGO self-assembly 3D structures is
a powerful tool to tailor the textural properties of the composites
toward improved CO2 capture performance
Resembling Graphene/Polymer Aerogel Morphology for Advancing the CO<sub>2</sub>/N<sub>2</sub> Selectivity of the Postcombustion CO<sub>2</sub> Capture Process
The separation of
CO2 from N2 remains a highly
challenging task in postcombustion CO2 capture processes,
primarily due to the relatively low CO2 content (3–15%)
compared to that of N2 (70%). This challenge is particularly
prominent for carbon-based adsorbents that exhibit relatively low
selectivity. In this study, we present a successfully implemented
strategy to enhance the selectivity of composite aerogels made of
reduced graphene oxide (rGO) and functionalized polymer particles.
Considering that the CO2/N2 selectivity of the
aerogels is affected on the one hand by the surface chemistry (offering
more sites for CO2 capture) and fine-tuned microporosity
(offering molecular sieve effect), both of these parameters were affected
in situ during the synthesis process. The resulting aerogels exhibit
improved CO2 adsorption capacity and a significant reduction
in N2 adsorption at a temperature of 25 °C and 1 atm,
leading to a more than 10-fold increase in selectivity compared to
the reference material. This achievement represents the highest selectivity
reported thus far for carbon-based adsorbents. Detailed characterization
of the aerogel surfaces has revealed an increase in the quantity of
surface oxygen functional groups, as well as an augmentation in the
fractions of micropores (<2 nm) and small mesopores (<5 nm)
as a result of the modified synthesis methodology. Additionally, it
was found that the surface morphology of the aerogels has undergone
important changes. The reference materials feature a surface rich
in curved wrinkles with an approximate diameter of 100 nm, resulting
in a selectivity range of 50–100. In contrast, the novel aerogels
exhibit a higher degree of oxidation, rendering them stiffer and less
elastic, resembling crumpled paper morphology. This transformation,
along with the improved functionalization and augmented microporosity
in the altered aerogels, has rendered the aerogels almost completely
N2-phobic, with selectivity values ranging from 470 to
621. This finding provides experimental evidence for the theoretically
predicted relationship between the elasticity of graphene-based adsorbents
and their CO2/N2 selectivity performance. It
introduces a new perspective on the issue of N2-phobicity.
The outstanding performance achieved, including a CO2 adsorption
capacity of nearly 2 mmol/g and the highest selectivity of 620, positions
these composites as highly promising materials in the field of carbon
capture and sequestration (CCS) postcombustion technology
Effect of Chain Architecture on the Compatibility of Block Copolymer/Nanoparticle Blends
The effect of block copolymer chain connectivity on the structure formation in binary blends comprising block copolymer hosts and enthalpically neutralized particle fillers is investigated for linear diblock (AB) and triblock (ABA and BAB) as well as four-arm star copolymer architectures (AB3 and A3B). For particles with approximately constant effective size (defined here as the ratio of filler particle diameter to host polymer radius of gyration), miscibility was observed only within diblock copolymers and within the domains formed by the end blocks of triblock copolymers. The limitation of particle miscibility within the triblock mid-domain is interpreted as a consequence of the entropy loss associated with particle deposition due to the stretched configuration of bridged midblock chains. Particle aggregation was observed in both star copolymer samples irrespective of the architecture of the particle-loaded polymer domain. In the case of particle loading of the branched copolymer domain, this is rationalized as a consequence of the increased effective particle size, whereas the incompatibility of particle fillers in the linear block domain of miktoarm copolymer hosts is interpreted as a result of the coupling of dimensional changes within the microstructure along with the reduced axial compressibility of the particle-free branched domain. The sensitive dependence of the particle compatibility on the chain architecture of the polymer host illustrates a yet unexplored parameter space that will need to be taken into account if particle blends are to be designed with branched or multiblock host copolymer architectures
<i>In vivo</i> toxicological evaluation of polymer brush engineered nanoceria: impact of brush charge
Nanoceria has a broad variety of industrial and pharmacological applications due to its antioxidant activity. Nanoceria can be modified by surface coating with polyelectrolyte brushes. Brushes can increase the surface charge of nanoceria, providing greater aqueous stability while reducing agglomeration. However, surface-coating also behaves as a barrier around nanoceria, affecting its redox equilibrium and, hence, its biological and toxicological properties. In the present study, we examined whether bare nanoceria (CeO2; 80–150 nm) and nanoceria modified by surface polymer brush, using negatively charged polyacrylic acid (CeO2@PAA) and positively charged poly (2-(methacryloyloxy)ethyl-trimethyl-ammonium chloride (CeO2@PMETAC), could induce systemic toxicity. As CeO2 has limited colloidal stability, which might result in vascular occlusion, intraperitoneal injection was used instead of intravenous administration. C57Bl/6 mice were four times injected with three different doses of each nanoceria-based sample (corresponding to 1.8, 5.3 and 16 mg Ce/kg BW/administration) for a total period of 14 days. CeO2@PMETAC induced a significant dose-dependent neutrophilia. Histopathological evaluation showed inflammatory processes in the capsule of liver, kidney, and spleen of animals at all doses of CeO2@PMETAC, and with the highest dose of CeO2@PAA and CeO2. However, none of the nanoceria-based samples tested increased the level of DNA damage or micronuclei in blood cells, even though Ce was detected by inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry analyses in the bone marrow. Only CeO2@PMETAC induced the presence of megakaryocytes in the spleen. A higher accumulation of Ce in mononuclear phagocyte system organs (liver, spleen and bone marrow) was observed after CeO2@PMETAC treatment compared with CeO2@PAA and CeO2.</p
