708 resultados para TUNABLE WETTABILITY
Resumo:
Plastics are polymers of conventional and extensive use in our day-to-day life. This is due to their light weight, adaptability to different uses and low prices. A downside of such extensive use is the environmental pollution arising from plastic production and disposal. Indeed, many commodity polymers are produced from non-renewable resources while other do not bio-degrade after their end-of-life disposal. Consequently, the ideal polymer comes from renewable raw materials and bio-degrades after its disposal, meaning that it would do little or no harm to the environment from the beginning to the end of its life cycle. In this thesis project a class of bio-based and bio-degradable co-polymers, namely poly(ester-amide)s, was investigated because of their tunable mechanical and bio-degradation properties as well as their renewable origin. Such polymers were synthetized and characterized thermically and mechanically. Furthermore, a scale-up procedure was developed and applied to one polymer and processing trials were made with the material obtained after scale-up.
Resumo:
Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Halide Perovskites (HOIPs) include a large class of materials described with the general formula ABX3, where A is an organic cation, B an inorganic cation and X an halide anion. HOIPs show excellent optoelectronic characteristics such as tunable band gap, high adsorption coefficient and great mobility life-time. A subclass of these materials, the so-called two- dimensional (2D) layered HOIPs, have emerged as potential alternatives to traditional 3D analogs to enhance the stability and increase performance of perovskite devices, with particular regard in the area of ionizing radiation detectors, where these materials have reached truly remarkable milestones. One of the key challenges for future development of efficient and stable 2D perovskite X-ray detector is a complete understanding of the nature of defects that lead to the formation of deep states. Deep states act as non-radiative recombination centers for charge carriers and are one of the factors that most hinder the development of efficient 2D HOIPs-based X-ray detectors. In this work, deep states in PEA2PbBr4 were studied through Photo-Induced Current Transient Spectroscopy (PICTS), a highly sensitive spectroscopic technique capable of detecting the presence of deep states in highly resistive ohmic materials, and characterizing their activation energy, capture cross section and, under stringent conditions, the concentration of these states. The evolution of deep states in PEA 2 PbBr 4 was evaluated after exposure of the material to high doses of ionizing radiation and during aging (one year). The data obtained allowed us to evaluate the contribution of ion migration in PEA2PbBr4. This work represents an important starting point for a better understanding of transport and recombination phenomena in 2D perovskites. To date, the PICTS technique applied to 2D perovskites has not yet been reported in the scientific literature.
Resumo:
The aim of this work was to optimize a methodology to extract cellulose and to produce NC, from different lignocellulosic biomasses (sorghum, Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench and sunn hemp, Crotalaria juncea L.). In addition, the NC produced was tested as a reinforcing agent in chitosan (Ch) films, to understand its effects on the properties of this biopolymer. The nanoparticles obtained from sorghum and sunn hemp were incorporated in Ch films at a rate of 2.5% w/w of chitosan, and the resultant bionanocomposites (Sorghum NC films and sunn hemp NC films) were fully characterized in terms of their morphology, mechanical and optical properties, permeability (water vapor), water wettability, and FT-IR spectra analysis. Chitosan films reinforced with commercial nanocellulose at the same rate were tested for comparison, as well as pristine chitosan (control). Bionanocomposites made from sorghum and sunn hemp NC were slightly more saturated and opaque than the pristine chitosan films, in particular outer sorghum NC films. Sunn hemp NC films also showed a slightly higher thickness than sorghum NC films and pristine chitosan films. Further, the results confirmed that sorghum NC improved the strength and stiffness of the chitosan biopolymer and that sunn hemp NC improved the plasticity of the chitosan polymer. Hence, results indicate that those lignocellulosic crops may afford a source of NC for the production of bionanocomposites. Considering the application of those bionanocomposites by the food packaging industry, sorghum NC - chitosan films showed more promising results than sunn hemp NC-chitosan films.