6 research outputs found

    An Unprecedented Surface Oxidation of Polystyrene Substrates by Wet Chemistry under Basic Conditions.

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    The surface of polystyrene substrates has been modified by wet chemistry consisting of a treatment with sodium hydroxide in a water-methanol solution at 50 degrees C for 15 h, under air atmosphere. The resulting samples were analyzed by XPS and AFM. The surface functional groups (hydroxyl and carboxyl functions) were assayed by radiolabeling. All the results are consistent with a surface oxidation process

    beta-casein and symmetrical triblock copolymer (PEO-PPO-PEO and PPO-PEO-PPO) surface properties at the air-water interface

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    International audienceA comparison of beta-casein and symmetrical triblock copolymer (PEO-PPO-PEO and PPO-PEO-PPO) adsorption layer properties at the air-water interface has been carried out by bubble tensiometry and ellipsometry. It has been verified that the equation of state parameters (pi~Gamma.exp(y)) obtained from surface pressure (pi) and ellipticity in Brewster conditions (roB), which is proportional to the surface concentration (Gamma) data, are the same as those obtained from dilational modulus epsilon and pi data. These two consistent approaches give further support to the theoretical model of block copolymers which has been previously developed for protein adsorption at fluid interfaces. It is shown that the interfacial behavior of the copolymer adsorption layer changes strongly as a function of the length of the hydrophilic and hydrophobic block sequences. The theoretical model may be used for the interpretation of the adsorption properties of the synthetic copolymers only when the size of the blocks is large enough. In the case of block copolymers, the coil is in a self-avoiding walk conformation (y = 3) whatever the temperature, while in the case of beta-casein, the polypeptide chain is partly collapsed at room temperature due to thermolabile noncovalent bonds. At the end of the first semidilute regime, there is clear evidence for a crossover toward a second semidilute regime for synthetic copolymers as well as for beta-casein but it is presently only partially characterized

    Natural Organic UV-Absorbent Coatings Based on Cellulose and Lignin: Designed Effects on Spectroscopic Properties

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    Novel nanocomposite coatings composed of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) and lignin (either synthetic or fractionated from spruce and corn stalks) were prepared without chemical modification or functionalization (via covalent attachment) of one of the two biopolymers. The spectroscopic properties of these coatings were investigated by UV–visible spectrophotometry and spectroscopic ellipsometry. When using the appropriate weight ratio of CNC/lignin (<i>R</i>), these nanocomposite systems exhibited high-performance optical properties, high transmittance in the visible spectrum, and high blocking in the UV spectrum. Atomic force microscopy analysis demonstrated that these coatings were smooth and homogeneous, with visible dispersed lignin nodules in a cellulosic matrix. It was also demonstrated that the introduction of nanoparticles into the medium increases the weight ratio and the CNC-specific surface area, which allows better dispersion of the lignin molecules throughout the solid film. Consequently, the larger molecular expansion of these aromatic polymers on the surface of the cellulosic nanoparticles dislocates the π–π aromatic aggregates, which increases the extinction coefficient and decreases the transmittance in the UV region. These nanocomposite coatings were optically transparent at visible wavelengths
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