941 resultados para 030603 Colloid and Surface Chemistry
Resumo:
Grazing incidence x-ray-diffraction investigations of the structures of Langmuir-Blodgett films of cadmium behenate with 1, 2, 3, 5, and 21 monolayers are reported. The single monolayer film, deposited on a hydrophilic substrate, showed a hexagonal structure, whereas the bilayer film, deposited on a hydrophobic substrate, had a rectangular structure with herringbone orientation of the acyl chains. With multilayer films formed on a hydrophilic substrate, it was possible to detect that the hexagonal structure of the first layer was retained when additional layers were deposited and that the additional layers had the same rectangular structure as the bilayer. (c) 2005 American Institute of Physics.
Resumo:
Expanded polytetrafluoroethylene (ePTFE) membranes were modified by graft copolymerization with methacryloxyethyl phosphate (MOEP) in methanol and 2-butanone (methyl ethyl ketone (MEK)) at ambient temperature using gamma irradiation. The effect of dose rate (0.46 and 4.6 kGyh(-1)), monomer concentration (1-40 %) and solvent were studied and the modified membranes were characterized by weight increase, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and scanning electron microscopy (SEM). XPS was used to determine the % degree of surface coverage using the C-F (ePTFE membrane) and the C-C (MOEP graft copolymer) peaks. Grafting yield, as well as surface coverage, were found to increase with increasing monomer concentration and were significantly higher for samples grafted in MEK than in methanol solution. SEM images showed distinctly different surface morphologies for the membranes grafted in methanol (smooth) and MEK (globular), hence indicating phase separation of the homopolymer in MEK. We propose that in our system, the non-solvent properties of MEK for the homopolymer play a more important role than solvent chain transfer reactions in determining grafting outcomes. (c) 2005 Society of Chemical Industry.
Resumo:
Photo-electron spectroscopy as an analytical tool has only received limited interest in the field of mineral science. Photo-electron spectroscopy, together with Auger electron spectroscopy, gives information about the positions of the energy levels in atoms or molecules. Application of this technique on solid materials will result in information of the band structure of these materials. The principle of photo electron spectroscopy is rather simple: photons with certain energy (wavelength) are allowed to collide with an atom, molecule or a solid material. These photons can then interact with electrons present in the atoms and one of these electrons can be excited from its orbital resulting in a situation similar to a free electron plus a positively charged atom or molecule.