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Grafting from inorganic surfaces

Grafting from silica particles, silicon wafers, and related surfaces usually involves attaching a chlorosilanc or alkoxysilane derivative. Thus alkoxyamincs (e.g, 361,744,749 3627 0) and a wide variety of ATRP initiators (e.g. 363751) have been attached directly to surfaces and used to initiate grafting from processes. [Pg.562]


The fundamental task, in our opinion, is to correlate the principles and methods of the proposed synthesis with those of mechanochemical synthesis. Thus, besides the destruction processes and mechanochemical synthesis discussed in the literature, other lands of transformations sometimes occur as side reactions, or even as major processes. These include chemical fixation of small molecules (methyl chloride or butyl alcohol) on mechanically activated macromolecular backbones grafting of inorganic surfaces (quartz, metals, metallic oxides, inorganic salts, etc.) dispersed by vibratory milling on polymerized fragments synthesized from monomers present in the reaction medium, and activated by centers on the inorganic surface (14) and the possibility of some reactions (such as nitration), achieved so far on macromolecular supports and only as side reactions. [Pg.88]

Wang YP, Pei XW, Yuan K. Reverse ATRP grafting from silica surface to prepare well-defined organic/inorganic hybrid nanocomposite. Mater Lett 2004 59 520-523. [Pg.391]

The previously discussed principles of grafting-to and grafting-from can also be applied for the modification of polymer surfaces with polymer brushes. However, the binding of linkers and polymerization initiators to polymer surfaces is not as straightforward as it is for oxidic inorganic materials. Thus, dedicated pretreatments are usually necessary. These may include rather harsh reaction conditions due to the chemical inertness of many polymers (see Chapter 3). Alternatively, radiation treatment of polymers (to form radicals) followed by exposure to air may be used to form peroxides and hydroperoxides, which can be directly used as initiators for thermally or ultraviolet-induced graft polymerizations [16,17] (see Chapter 2). [Pg.5]


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Graft grafting from

Grafted surfaces

Grafting from

Grafting from inorganic surfaces techniques

Inorganic surface grafting

Inorganic surfaces

Surface grafts

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