E-Book, Englisch, 600 Seiten, E-Book
Reihe: Advance Materials Series
E-Book, Englisch, 600 Seiten, E-Book
Reihe: Advance Materials Series
ISBN: 978-1-118-99898-4
Verlag: John Wiley & Sons
Format: EPUB
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Specifically, Advanced Functional Materials:
* Compiles the objectives related to functional materials and provides detailed reviews of fundamentals, novel production methods, and frontiers of functional materials, including metalic oxides, conducting polymers, carbon nanotubes, discotic liquid crystalline dimers, calixarenes, crown ethers, chitosan and graphene.
* Discusses the production and characterization of these materials, while mentioning recent approaches developed as well as their uses and applications for sensitive chemiresistors, optical and electronic materials, solar hydrogen generation, supercapacitors, display and organic light-emitting diodes, functional adsorbents, and antimicrobial and biocompatible layer formation.
This volume in the Advanced Materials Book Series includes twelve chapters divided into two main areas: Part 1: Functional Metal Oxides: Architecture, Design and Applications and Part 2: Multifunctional Hybrid Materials: Fundamentals and Frontiers
Autoren/Hrsg.
Weitere Infos & Material
Preface xv
Part 1: Functional Metal Oxides: Architecture, Design, and Applications
1 Development of Toxic Chemicals Sensitive Chemiresistors Based on Metal Oxides, Conducting Polymers and Nanocomposites Thin Films 3
Sadia Ameen, M. Shaheer Akhtar, Hyung-Kee Seo, and Hyung-Shik Shin
1.1 Introduction 4
1.2 Semiconducting Metal Oxide Nanostructures for Chemiresistor 6
1.3 Conducting Polymers Nanostructures for Chemiresistors 21
1.4 Semiconducting Nanocomposites for Chemoresistors 44
1.5 Conclusions and Outlook 48
Acknowledgments 49
References 49
2 The Synthetic Strategy for Developing Mesoporous Materials through Nanocasting Route 59
Rawesh Kumar and Biswajit Chowdhury
2.1 Introduction to Nanocasting 59
2.2 Steps of Nanocasting 61
2.3 Porous Silica as Template for Inorganic Compounds 68
2.4 Porous Silica as Template for Mesoporous Carbon 86
2.5 Porous Carbon as Template for Inorganic Compound 104
2.6 Future Prescriptive 113
2.7 Limitation 114
2.8 Conclusion 115
Acknowledgments 116
References 116
3 Spray Pyrolysis of Nano-structured Optical and Electronic Materials 127
Nurdan Demirci Sankir, Erkan Aydin, Esma Ugur, and Mehmet Sankir
3.1 Introduction 128
3.2 Spray Pyrolysis Technology 128
3.3 Nanoparticles Created via Spray Pyrolysis Method 134
3.4 Nanopillars and Nanoporous Structures 142
3.5 Nanocrystalline Thin Film Deposition by Spray Pyrolysis 150
3.6 Conclusion 167
Acknowledgments 168
References 168
4 Multifunctional Spinel Ferrite Nanoparticles for Biomedical Application 183
Noppakun Sanpo, Cuie Wen, Christopher C. Berndt, and James Wang
4.1 Introduction 183
4.2 Ferrites 187
4.3 The Sol Gel Method 189
4.4 Chelating Agents 195
4.5 Approach and Methodology 199
4.6 Experimental Results 202
4.7 Concluding Remarks 213
Acknowledgements 214
References 214
5 Heterostructures Based on TiO2 and Silicon for Solar Hydrogen Generation 219
Dilip Kumar Behara, Arun Prakash Upadhyay, Gyan Prakash Sharma, B.V. Sai Krishna Kiran, Sri Sivakumar and Raj Ganesh S. Pala
5.1 Introduction 220
5.2 Overview of Heterostructures 221
5.3 TiO2 Heterostructures 234
5.4 Silicon Based Heterostructures 253
5.5 Some Unaddressed Issues of Heterostructures in Relation to Photocatalysis 261
5.6 Summary/Conclusions and Future Outlook 262
Acknowledgment 263
Notes on Contributors 263
References 264
6 Studies on Electrochemical Properties of MnO2 and CuO Decorated Multi-Walled Carbon Nanotubes as High-Performance Electrode Materials 283
Mohan Raja
6.1 Introduction 283
6.2 Experimental 285
6.3 Characterization 286
6.4 Results and Discussion 286
6.5 Conclusion 292
References 293
Part 2: Multifunctional Hybrid Materials: Fundamentals and Frontiers
7 Discotic Liquid Crystalline Dimers: Chemistry and Applications 297
Shilpa Setia, Sandeep Kumar and Santanu Kumar Pal
7.1 Introduction 298
7.2 Structure-Property Relationship of Discotic Dimers 300
7.3 Applications 357
7.4 Conclusions and Outlook 361
8 Supramolecular Nanoassembly and Its Potential 367
Alok Pandya, Heena Goswami, Anand Lodha and Pinkesh Sutariya
8.1 Supramolecular Chemistry 368
8.2 Nanochemistry 376
8.3 Supramolecular Nanoassembly 384
8.4 Conclusion and Future Prospects 394
References 396
Suggested further reading 397
9 Carbon/-Based Hybrid Composites as Advanced Electrodes for Supercapacitors 399
S.T. Senthilkumar, K. Vijaya Sankar , J. S. Melo, A. Gedanken, and R. Kalai Selvana
9.1 Introduction 400
9.2 Principle of Supercapacitor 402
9.3 Activated Carbon and their Composites 410
9.4 Carbon Aerogels and Their Composite Materials 411
9.5 Carbon Nanotubes (CNTs) and their Composite Materials 415
9.6 Two-Dimensional Graphene 417
9.7 Conclusion and Outlook 424
Acknowledgements 425
10 Synthesis, Characterization, and Uses of Novel-Architecture Copolymers through Gamma Radiation Technique 433
H. Ivin Melendez-Ortiz and Emilio Bucio
10.1 Introduction 434
10.2 Ionizing Radiation 435
10.3 Gamma-Ray Measurements 438
10.4 Synthesis of Graft Polymers by Gamma-Rays 441
10.5 Different Architecture of Polymers 449
10.6 Polymer Characterization 455
Acknowledgments 458
References 458
11 Advanced Composite Adsorbents: Chitosan versus Graphene 463
George Z. Kyzas
11.1 Introduction 463
11.2 Chitosan-Based Materials 465
11.3 Graphene-Based Materials 478
11.4 Graphene/Chitosan Composite Adsorbents 483
11.5 Conclusions 488
References 489
12 Antimicrobial Biopolymers 493
S. Sayed and M.A. Jardine
12.1 Introduction 493
12.2 Biopolymers 496
12.3 Synthetic Biodegradable Polymers 506
12.4 Metal Loading 514
12.5 Assessment of Antimicrobial/Antifungal Testing Methods 518
12.6 Conclusion 525
References 526
13 Organometal Halide Perovskites for Photovoltaic Applications 535
Sai Bai, Yizheng Jin, and Feng Gao
13.1 Introduction 535
13.2 Fundamentals of Organometal Halide Perovskite Solar Cells 537
13.3 Deposition Methods and Crystal Engineering of Organometal Halide Perovskites 547
13.4 Commercialization Challenges and Possible Solutions 558
13.5 Summary and Conclusion 561
Acknowledgements 562
References 562
Index 567