General Strategies for Nanoparticle DispersionTraditionally the dispersion of particles in polymeric materials has proven difficult and frequently results in phase separation and agglomeration. We show that thermodynamically stable dispersion of nanoparticles into a polymeric liquid is enhanced for systems where the radius of gyration of the linear polymer is greater than the radius of the nanoparticle. Dispersed nanoparticles swell the linear polymer chains, resulting in a polymer radius of gyration that grows with the nanoparticle volume fraction. It is proposed that this entropically unfavorable process is offset by an enthalpy gain due to an increase in molecular contacts at dispersed nanoparticle surfaces as compared with the surfaces of phase-separated nanoparticles. Even when the dispersed state is thermodynamically stable, it may be inaccessible unless the correct processing strategy is adopted, which is particularly important for the case of fullerene dispersion into linear polymers.
Rigidity Theory and ApplicationsM. F. Thorpe, Phillip M. Duxbury|Kluwer Academic Publishers eBooks|2002 This series of books, which is published at the rate of about one per year, addresses fundamental problems in materials science. The contents cover a broad range of topics from small clusters of atoms to engineering materials and involve chemistry, physics, materials science, and engineering, with length scales ranging from ngstroms up to millimeters. The emphasis is on basic science rather than on applications. Each book focuses on a single area of current interest and brings together leading experts to give an up-to-date discussion of their work and the work of others.
Multifunctional Nanocomposites with Reduced ViscosityIt is demonstrated that nanocomposites exhibiting reduced viscosity and multifunctional performance enhancements may be fabricated using simple processing procedures. These behaviors are elucidated by analysis of the effects of dispersed organic (fullerene) nanoparticles and inorganic (magnetite) nanoparticles on the behavior of polystyrene, demonstrating that simple spherical nanoparticles can induce a range of unexpected behavior due to nanoscale effects. In general, multifunctional performance improvements including enhanced mechanical, electrical, magnetic and thermal degradation properties as well as reduced viscosity are promoted when simple design guidelines are followed. These guidelines are tabulated.
Ab initio determination of solid-state nanostructureDecoupling of Structural and Electronic Phase Transitions in<mml:math xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" display="inline"><mml:msub><mml:mi>VO</mml:mi><mml:mn>2</mml:mn></mml:msub></mml:math>Using optical, TEM, and ultrafast electron diffraction experiments we find that single crystal VO(2) microbeams gently placed on insulating substrates or metal grids exhibit different behaviors, with structural and metal-insulator transitions occurring at the same temperature for insulating substrates, while for metal substrates a new monoclinic metal phase lies between the insulating monoclinic phase and the metallic rutile phase. The structural and electronic phase transitions in these experiments are strongly first order and we discuss their origins in the context of current understanding of multiorbital splitting, strong correlation effects, and structural distortions that act cooperatively in this system.