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Monolithic nanoporous crystalline aerogels

TitleMonolithic nanoporous crystalline aerogels
Publication TypeArticolo su Rivista peer-reviewed
Year of Publication2013
AuthorsDaniel, C., Longo S., Ricciardi Rosa, Reverchon E., and Guerra G.
JournalMacromolecular Rapid Communications
Volume34
Pagination1194-1207
ISSN10221336
KeywordsAerogels, art, article, Biological, Chemical separation, chemistry, cocrystalline forms, Crosslinking, Crystalline aerogels, Crystalline phasis, Crystallites, Equipment, Gel, Gels, Materials handling, methodology, Microporosity, molecular storage, Molecular storages, Monolithic aerogels, nanopore, Nanopores, nanoporous-crystalline forms, Physical gel, physical gels, polymer, Polymeric aerogel, Polymers, Porosity, Portraits as Topic, Preparation method, Preservation, Purification, Scanning electron microscopy, Transport properties, Ultrastructure
Abstract

Monolithic aerogels can be easily obtained by drying physical gels formed by linear uncross-linked polymers. Preparation methods, structure, and properties of these physically cross-linked polymeric aerogels are reviewed, with particular emphasis to those whose cross-linking knots are crystallites and, more in particular, crystallites exhibiting nanoporous-crystalline forms. The latter aerogels present beside disordered amorphous micropores (typical of all aerogels) also all identical nanopores of the crystalline phases. Their outstanding guest transport properties combined with low material cost, robustness, durability, and ease of handling and recycle make these aerogels suitable for applications in chemical separations, purification, and storage as well as in biomedicine. Scientific, technological, and industrial perspectives for monolithic nanoporous-crystalline polymeric aerogels are also discussed. Monolithic aerogels can be obtained by drying physical gels formed by linear uncross-linked polymers. Particularly relevant are aerogels, the cross-linking knots of which are nanoporous crystalline, which beside disordered amorphous micropores (typical of all aerogels and shown by scanning electron microscopy) also present all identical crystalline nanopores. © 2013 WILEY-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, Weinheim.

Notes

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URLhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84881478054&doi=10.1002%2fmarc.201300260&partnerID=40&md5=542232b46bff73d21f6a4a426cb72683
DOI10.1002/marc.201300260
Citation KeyDaniel20131194