This paper demonstrates a chemical surface modification method for covalent attachment of various polymers by using silane-based "click" chemistry on silica surfaces and within glass microchannels suitable for CE systems. Modified surfaces are characterized by contact angle measurements, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and Fourier transform infrared-attenuated total reflection spectroscopy. Electroosmotic flow (EOF) measurements in modified and unmodified channels are provided.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeparation rates and resolutions within capillary electrophoretic (CE) systems can be enhanced when surface zeta potentials are uniform with minimum deviations from ideal pluglike flow. Microfluidic CE devices based on poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) are being developed due to the optical clarity, availability, stability, and reproducible electroosmotic flow (EOF) rates displayed by this polymer. Control of EOF in polymer-based CE systems can be achieved by surface zeta potential alteration through chemical modification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe describe herein a polymeric material that prefers to align perpendicular to a stretch-aligned polymer host in the solid state. Poly(iptycene) poly-1 was synthesized from monomer 1 under hyperbaric techniques via a Diels-Alder polymerization. Polarized excitation spectra of the anthracene end groups in this material in a stretch-aligned, solution-cast poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC) film showed that the poly(iptycene) prefers to align normal (counter aspect ratio) to the stretching direction of the PVC.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurrent methodologies for the production of meso- and nanoporous materials include the use of a surfactant to produce a self-assembled template around which the material is formed. However, post-production surfactant removal often requires centrifugation, calcination, and/or solvent washing which can damage the initially formed material architecture(s). Surfactants that can be disassembled into easily removable fragments following material preparation would minimize processing damage to the material structure, facilitating formation of templated hybrid architectures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwo new surfactant molecules are reported that contain thermally labile Diels-Alder adducts connecting the hydrophilic and hydrophobic sections of each molecule. The two surfactants possess identical hydrophobic dodecyl tail segments but have phenol and carboxylic acid hydrophilic headgroups, respectively. Deprotonation with potassium hydroxide affords the formation of water-soluble surfactants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Am Chem Soc
November 2003
Polymers incorporating the triptycene subunit were prepared for the molecular-level design of low dielectric constant (low-kappa) materials that can be used to manufacture faster integrated circuits. Triptycenes having restricted rotation by multiple point attachment to the polymer backbone are shown to introduce free volume into the films, thereby lowering their dielectric constants. The triptycene containing polymers exhibit a number of desirable properties including low-water absorption and high thermal stability.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTriptycenes have general applicability for increasing the alignment of fluorescent and dichroic dyes in LC hosts. Dyes containing varying numbers of triptycenes were synthesized to study the effect of free-volume alignment of triptycenes on the alignment of dyes. These dyes were designed such that multiple triptycenes could be incorporated and the triptycene-free volume is coincident to the aspect ratio of the dye, allowing a cooperative effect to increase their overall average alignment.
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