Polymers in Particulate Systems : Properties and Applications /: Properties and Applications. (2001)
- Record Type:
- Book
- Title:
- Polymers in Particulate Systems : Properties and Applications /: Properties and Applications. (2001)
- Main Title:
- Polymers in Particulate Systems : Properties and Applications
- Further Information:
- Note: Edited by Vincent A. Hackley, P. Somasundaran, Jennifer A. Lewis.
- Editors:
- Hackley, Vincent A
Somasundaran, P
Lewis, Jennifer A - Contents:
- Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Preface; Contents; Contributors; Part I: Colloidal Stability and Polymer Functionality; Chapter 1: Effect of Physisorbed Polymers on the Interaction of Latex Particles and Their Dispersion Stability; I. INTRODUCTION; II. POTENTIAL ENERGY AND HYDRODYNAMIC MEASUREMENTS; A. Polymeric Repulsion; B. Hydrodynamic Interactions; C. van der Waals Attraction; D. Adsorbed Polymer Collapse with Diminishing Solvent Quality; III .STABILITY & FLOCCULATION RATE MEASUREMENTS; A. Temperature Dependence of Polymeric Stabilization B. Rapid Brownian Flocculation KineticsC. Change In Flocculation Rate with Temperature Cycling; IV. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; Chapter 2: Electrosteric Stabilization Mechanisms in Nonaqueous High Solids Loading Dispersions; I. INTRODUCTION; II. STERlC STABILIZATION; III. ELECTROSTATIC STABILIZATION; IV. CHARGE GENERATION IN NONAQUEOUS SYSTEMS; A. General Acid-Base Interactions; B. ChargIng from Solvent-PartIcle InteractIons; C. Charging from Dispersant-PartIcle Interactions; D. 3-Way Interactions Between Polymer, Dispersant and Solvent; V. ROLE OF MOISTURE; A. Physlsorbed and Chemlsorbed Water B. Trace Amounts of Water In the SolventVI. DLVO THEORY FOR NONAQUEOUS SYSTEMS; VII. OPTIMUM MOLECULAR WEIGHT REQUIREMENTS; VIII. SUMMARY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 3: Depletion Interactions Produced by Charged Spheres and Spheroids; I. INTRODUCTION; II. THEORY; A. Force Balance on a ColloIdal Particle -- SphericalCover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Preface; Contents; Contributors; Part I: Colloidal Stability and Polymer Functionality; Chapter 1: Effect of Physisorbed Polymers on the Interaction of Latex Particles and Their Dispersion Stability; I. INTRODUCTION; II. POTENTIAL ENERGY AND HYDRODYNAMIC MEASUREMENTS; A. Polymeric Repulsion; B. Hydrodynamic Interactions; C. van der Waals Attraction; D. Adsorbed Polymer Collapse with Diminishing Solvent Quality; III .STABILITY & FLOCCULATION RATE MEASUREMENTS; A. Temperature Dependence of Polymeric Stabilization B. Rapid Brownian Flocculation KineticsC. Change In Flocculation Rate with Temperature Cycling; IV. CONCLUSIONS; REFERENCES; Chapter 2: Electrosteric Stabilization Mechanisms in Nonaqueous High Solids Loading Dispersions; I. INTRODUCTION; II. STERlC STABILIZATION; III. ELECTROSTATIC STABILIZATION; IV. CHARGE GENERATION IN NONAQUEOUS SYSTEMS; A. General Acid-Base Interactions; B. ChargIng from Solvent-PartIcle InteractIons; C. Charging from Dispersant-PartIcle Interactions; D. 3-Way Interactions Between Polymer, Dispersant and Solvent; V. ROLE OF MOISTURE; A. Physlsorbed and Chemlsorbed Water B. Trace Amounts of Water In the SolventVI. DLVO THEORY FOR NONAQUEOUS SYSTEMS; VII. OPTIMUM MOLECULAR WEIGHT REQUIREMENTS; VIII. SUMMARY; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 3: Depletion Interactions Produced by Charged Spheres and Spheroids; I. INTRODUCTION; II. THEORY; A. Force Balance on a ColloIdal Particle -- Spherical Macromolecules; B. Extension to Spheroidal Macromolecules; C. Expressions for the Particle-Macromolecule Electrostatic Interactions; D. Analytical Method for Uncharged Systems; III. MODEL RESULTS; A. Systems of Spherical Macromolecules B. Systems of Spheroidal MacromoleculesC. Particle-Macromolecule Interactions In Charged Systems; D. Depletion Interactions In Charged Spheroid Systems; IV. DISCUSSION OF MODEL RESULTS; A. Magnitude of the Effect of Charge on the Depletion Interactions; B. Interactions Between Macromolecules; V. EXPERIMENTAL DEMONSTRATION; A. Materials; B. Procedure; C. Data Analysis; VI. EXPERIMENTAL RESULTS; A. Flocculation Experiments; B. Comparison with Depletion Model; VII. CONCLUSIONS; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES Chapter 4: Role of Polymer Functionality in Specific Adsorption to Oxides: A Molecular Recognition ApproachI. INTRODUCTION; II. HYDROGEN BONDING AND SURFACE STRUCTURE; III. MATERIALS AND METHODS; A. Materials; B. Methods; IV. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION; A. The PEO/Slllca System; B. Other ""Hydrogen Bonding"" Polymers; C. Polymer Functional Group/Active Site CorrelatIon; V. CONCLUSION; ACKNOWLEDGMENTS; REFERENCES; Chapter 5: Monitoring of Adsorbed Polymer Conformation in Concentrated Suspensions; I. INTRODUCTION; II. POLYMER ADSORPTION AND CONFORMATION; A. Theory … (more)
- Publisher Details:
- Boca Raton, FL : CRC Press
- Publication Date:
- 2001
- Extent:
- 1 online resource
- Subjects:
- 547/.70454
Chemistry, Physical and theoretical
Chemistry, Physical and theoretical
Electronic books - Languages:
- English
- ISBNs:
- 9781482271119
1482271117 - Access Rights:
- Legal Deposit; Only available on premises controlled by the deposit library and to one user at any one time; The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK).
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- Restricted: Printing from this resource is governed by The Legal Deposit Libraries (Non-Print Works) Regulations (UK) and UK copyright law currently in force.
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- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library HMNTS - ELD.DS.283147
- Ingest File:
- 02_327.xml