Data di Pubblicazione:
2008
Abstract:
Polyolefins are today the most used thermoplastic materials thanks to the high technology and
sustainability of the polymerization process, their excellent thermomechanical properties and their good
environmental compatibility, including easy recycling. In the last few decades much effort has been devoted
worldwide to extend the applications of polyolefins by conferring on them new properties through mixing
and blending with different materials. In this latter context, nanocomposites have recently offered new exciting
possibilities. This has been made possible on the basis of the improvement of polyolefin functionalization processes
with the availability of several olefin homo- and copolymers bearing a small (generally less than 1mol%) amount
of backbone grafted polar groups. These are indeed adequate to endow favourable interface interactions with polar
macromolecules and inorganic compounds, leading first to compatible blends and then to microcomposites. The
successful use of nanostructured dispersed materials has opened, on a similar basis, the way to nanocomposites
as described in this review. This review provides a broad and updated description of the synthetic routes to
nanostructured biphase materials having the typical structural properties of polyolefins (continuous matrix) but
showing enhanced thermomechanical properties, thermostability, lower flammability, lower gas permeability and
electrical and optical properties, thanks to the presence of an extended interphase interaction with very different
nanodispersed species.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Elenco autori:
Coiai, Serena; Ciardelli, Francesco; Passaglia, Elisa
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