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1.
Molecules ; 29(11)2024 Jun 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38893520

ABSTRACT

The objective of this study was to investigate the modification of glass surfaces by the synergistic combination of cold plasma and chemical surface modification techniques. Glass surface hydrophobicity was obtained as a result of various plasma and deposition operational conditions. The mechanisms governing the hydrophobization process were also studied. Glass plates were activated with plasma using different gases (oxygen and argon) at different treatment times, ranging from 30 to 1800 s. Then, the plasma-treated surfaces were exposed to hexamethyldisilazane vapors at different temperatures, i.e., 25, 60, and 100 °C. Complete characterization, including contact angle measurements, surface free energy calculations, 3D profilometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, Fourier-transform infrared spectroscopy, and scanning electron microscopy, was accomplished. It was found that the extent of the hydrophobicity effect depends on both the plasma pre-treatment and the specific conditions of the hexamethyldisilazane deposition process. Plasma activation led to the formation of active sites on the glass surface, which promoted the adsorption and reaction of hexamethyldisilazane species, thereby inducing surface chemical modification. Longer plasma pre-treatment resulted in stronger modification on the glass surface, resulting in changes in the surface roughness. The largest water contact angle of ≈100° was obtained for the surface activated by argon plasma for 1800 s and exposed to hexamethyldisilazane vapors at 25 °C. The changes in the surface properties were caused by the introduction of the hydrophobic trimethylsilyl groups onto the glass surface as well as roughness development.

2.
ACS Omega ; 4(9): 13863-13871, 2019 Aug 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31497703

ABSTRACT

Various nanostructured amorphous silicas [fumed silicas such as crude (A-300), hydro-compacted (cA-300, TS 100), and precipitated silica Syloid 244] were modified by different polydimethylsiloxanes such as PDMS5, PDMS100, PDMS200, PDMS1000, and PDMS12500 (the label numbers show the viscosity (η) values) using dimethyl carbonate (DMC) as a siloxane-bond-breaking reagent. In addition, hexamethyldisilazane was used to modify fumed silica cA-300. The nanocomposites were characterized using microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, thermodesorption, nitrogen adsorption-desorption, solid-state NMR spectroscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, and zeta-potential methods. It was found that the morphological, textural, and structural characteristics of silicas grafted with PDMS depend strongly not only on the type and content of the polymers used but also on the organization of nonporous nanoparticles (NPNP) in secondary structures (aggregates of NPNP and agglomerated aggregates, ANPNP), as well on the reaction temperature (T r). Specifically, we determined that ANPNP with a macro/mesoporous character are favorable for the effective modification of the silicas studied with short polymers and no DMC addition but at higher temperatures or for a longer silicone polymer with the presence of DMC and at lower temperatures. In particular, the PDMS/DMC-modified silicas are of great interest from a practical point of view because they remain in a dispersed state with no strong compaction of the secondary structures after modification, and this corresponds to a better distribution of the modified nanoparticles in polymeric or other matrices.

3.
Langmuir ; 34(40): 12145-12153, 2018 10 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30212631

ABSTRACT

It is well-known that interaction of hydrophobic powders with water is weak, and upon mixing, they typically form separated phases. Preparation of hydrophobic nanosilica AM1 with a relatively large content of bound water with no formation of separated phases was the aim of this study. Unmodified nanosilica A-300 and initial AM1 (A-300 completely hydrophobized by dimethyldichlorosilane), compacted A-300 (cA-300), and compacted AM1 (cAM1) containing 50-58 wt % of bound water were studied using low-temperature 1H NMR spectroscopy, thermogravimetry, infrared spectroscopy, microscopy, small-angle X-ray scattering, nitrogen adsorption, and theoretical modeling. After mechanical activation (∼20 atm) upon stirring of AM1/water mixture at the degree of hydration h = 1.0 or 1.4 g of distilled water per gram of dry silica, all water is bound and the blend has the bulk density of 0.7 g/cm3. The temperature and interfacial behaviors of bound water depend strongly on a dispersion media type (air, chloroform, and chloroform with trifluoroacetic acid (4:1)) because the boundary area between immiscible water and chloroform should be minimal. Water and chloroform molecules are of different sizes affecting their distribution in pores (voids between silica nanoparticles in their aggregates) of different sizes. Structural, morphological, and textural characteristics of silicas, and environmental features affect not only the distribution of bound water, but also the amounts of strongly (frozen at T < 260 K) and weakly (frozen at 260 K < T < 273 K) bound and strongly (chemical shift δH = 4-6 ppm) and weakly (δH = 1-2 ppm) associated waters. Despite the changes in the characteristics of cAM1, it demonstrates a flotation effect. The developed system with cAM1/bound water could be of interest from a practical point of view due to controlled interactions with aqueous surroundings.

4.
Polymers (Basel) ; 10(2)2018 Jan 26.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30966152

ABSTRACT

Organosilicon layers chemically anchored on silica surfaces show high carbon content, good thermal and chemical stability and find numerous applications as fillers in polymer systems, thickeners in dispersing media, and as the stationary phases and carriers in chromatography. Methyl-terminated poly(dimethylsiloxanes) (PDMSs) are typically considered to be inert and not suitable for surface modification because of the absence of readily hydrolyzable groups. Therefore, in this paper, we report a new approach for surface modification of silica (SiO2) nanoparticles with poly(dimethylsiloxanes) with different lengths of polymer chains (PDMS-20, PDMS-50, PDMS-100) in the presence of diethyl carbonate (DEC) as initiator of siloxane bond splitting. Infrared spectroscopy (IR), elemental analysis (CHN), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), rotational viscosity and contact angle of wetting were employed for the characterization of the raw fumed silica and modified silica nanoparticles. Elemental analysis data revealed that the carbon content in the grafted layer is higher than 8 wt % for all modified silicas, but it decreases significantly after sample treatment in polar media for silicas which were modified using neat PDMS. The IR spectroscopy data indicated full involvement of free silanol groups in the chemisorption process at a relatively low temperature (220 °C) for all resulting samples. The contact angle studies confirmed hydrophobic surface properties of the obtained materials. The rheology results illustrated that fumed silica modified with mixtures of PDMS-x/DEC exhibited thixotropic behavior in industrial oil (I-40A), and exhibited a fully reversible nanostructure and shorter structure recovery time than nanosilicas modified with neat PDMS. The obtained results from AFM and TEM analysis revealed that the modification of fumed silica with mixtures of PDMS-20/DEC allows obtaining narrow particle size distribution with uniform dispersity and an average particle size of 15⁻17 nm. The fumed silica nanoparticles chemically modified with mixtures of PDMS-x/DEC have potential applications such as nanofillers of various polymeric systems, thickeners in dispersing media, and additives in coatings.

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