RESUMEN
Aerogels are attracting increasing attention due to their high thermal insulation ability as well as unique properties such as high porosity, surface area, and transparency. However, low mechanical strengths, originating from their unique porous structure, impede handling, formability, mass production, and extended applications. This minireview focuses on the strengthening of aerogels by several organic-inorganic hybridization strategies. In particular, successful strengthening methodologies, which employ organo-substituted alkoxysilanes as the single precursor for the sol-gel preparations, developed by the authors are highlighted. Moreover, improvements in compressive strength and elasticity lead to monolithic aerogel-like xerogels through ambient pressure drying. Correlations between structures in different length scales (e.g., molecular, network, and pore structure levels) and resultant mechanical properties are discussed for further understandings and better design toward mechanically improved aerogels/xerogels and their applications.
RESUMEN
Transparent, low-density ethenylene-bridged polymethylsiloxane [Ethe-BPMS, O2/2(CH3)Si-CHâCH-Si(CH3)O2/2] aerogels from 1,2-bis(methyldiethoxysilyl)ethene have successfully been synthesized via a sol-gel process. A two-step sol-gel process composed of hydrolysis under acidic conditions and polycondensation under basic conditions in a liquid surfactant produces a homogeneous pore structure based on cross-linked nanosized colloidal particles. Visible-light transmittance of the aerogels varies with the concentration of the base catalyst and reaches as high as 87% (at a wavelength of 550 nm for a 10 mm thick sample). Gelation and aging temperature strongly affect the deformation behavior of the resultant aerogels against uniaxial compression, and the obtained aerogels prepared at 80 °C show high elasticity after being unloaded. This highly resilient behavior is primarily derived from the rigidity of ethenylene groups, which is confirmed by a comparison with other aerogels with similar molecular structures, ethylene-bridged polymethylsiloxane and polymethylsilsesquioxane. Applicability of the addition reaction using a Diels-Alder reaction of benzocyclobutene has also been investigated, revealing that a successful addition takes place on the ethenylene linkings, which is verified using Raman and solid-state NMR spectroscopies. Insights into the effect of molecular structure on mechanical properties and the availability of surface functionalization provided in this study are important for realizing transparent aerogels with the desired functionality.
RESUMEN
Reactions of chloromethyltrimethoxysilane (CMTMS) and its derived colloidal network polychloromethylsilsesquioxane (PCMSQ) have been investigated to extend the material design strategy toward functionalized and mechanically reinforced aerogels. In a carefully designed sol-gel system, CMTMS has afforded transparent aerogels in the presence of cationic surfactant. The surface chloromethyl groups with polarity and reactivity are shown to be useful for supporting nanostructures, with photoluminescent carbon dots (C-dots) prepared from polyethylenimine and citric acid as an example. Furthermore, since nucleophilic substitution (SN2) reactions on the surface chloromethyl groups are found to control the equilibrium of formation/dissociation of siloxane bonds, a new gelation strategy triggered by SN2 reactions in sol-gel has been developed. In the presence of nucleophilic organic species such as polyamines, a hybrid network consisting of PCMSQ cross-linked with a polyamine nucleophile can be prepared to enhance mechanical properties of aerogel.
RESUMEN
Transparent, monolithic aerogels with nanosized colloidal skeletons have been obtained from a single precursor of 1,2-bis(methyldiethoxysilyl)ethane (BMDEE) by adopting a liquid surfactant and a two-step process involving strong-acid, followed by strong-base, sol-gel reactions. This precursor BMDEE forms the ethylene-bridged polymethylsiloxane (EBPMS, O2/2(CH3)Si-CH2CH2-Si(CH3)O2/2) network, in which each silicon has one methyl, two bridging oxygens, and one bridging ethylene, exhibiting an analogous structure to that of the previously reported polymethylsilsesquioxane (PMSQ, CH3SiO3/2) aerogels having one methyl and three bridging oxygen atoms. Obtained aerogels consist of fine colloidal skeletons and show high visible-light transparency and a flexible deformation behavior against compression without collapse. Similar to the PMSQ aerogels, a careful tuning of synthetic conditions can produce low-density (0.19 g cm-3) and highly transparent (76% at 550 nm, corresponding to 10 mm thick samples) xerogels via ambient pressure drying by solvent evaporation due to their high strength and resilience against compression. Moreover, EBPMS aerogels exhibit higher bending strength and bending strain at break against the three-point bending mode compared to PMSQ aerogels. This improved bendability is presumably derived from the introduced ethylene-bridging parts, suggesting the potential for realizing transparent and bendable aerogels in such polysiloxane materials with organic linking units.
RESUMEN
The affinity between carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and organic compounds is of substantial importance since it strongly relates to the dispersibility of CNTs in those compounds. Several affinity evaluation methods have been developed so far, and the concept of the Hansen solubility parameter is a representative method widely used in the field of nanocarbon materials. Here, we demonstrate that CNT-loaded silica columns can effectively assess the affinity of organic compounds for CNT surface by exploiting the chromatographic retention time as a criterion. Obtained trends of the affinity of organic compounds for CNT were compared to those based on Hansen solubility parameter distance values. Most organic compounds showed similar trends, but one exceptional compound was observed. Simple CNT dispersion tests were conducted with these organic compounds to demonstrate the advantage of the chromatographic assessment. Further, we conducted comparison experiments using a pyrene-functionalized column and other CNT-loaded columns to elucidate the characteristics of each CNT column. The chromatographic approaches using CNT columns would be beneficial for realizing CNT suspensions with improved CNT dispersibility.
RESUMEN
PURPOSE: Desmoplastic infantile gangliogliomas (DIGs) are rare tumors of infancy. Herein, we describe an unusual case of DIG diagnosed by prenatal ultrasound. METHODS: This 5-day-old newborn was delivered after a prenatal ultrasound revealed a large cystic mass in the left cerebral hemisphere along with an echogenic solid component. RESULTS: The tumor revealed a glial and neuronal proliferation in a background of desmoplasia more typical of DIG and a minor component with a more primitive, immature appearance to the glioneuronal elements. A significant component of the tumor was composed of pleomorphic eosinophilic spindle cells in whorls and interlacing fascicles that showed a strong, sharp, and diffuse positivity for desmin, thus mimicking rhabdomyosarcoma. However, the tumor cells were GFAP (+), INI-1 (+), and myogenin (-). Mitoses were seen both in the more spindle cell astroglial areas as well as the more primitive neuroepithelial cells. The MIB-1 proliferation index was brisk, exceeding 15 %, and in areas it was estimated to be as high as 30 %. Such high proliferation index has been described and accepted in the more primitive neuroepithelial areas, but not in the terminally differentiated, spindle cell astroglial areas as in our case. Our patient was incidentally diagnosed prenatally. To our knowledge, this case is the first documented congenital DIG diagnosed prenatally. CONCLUSIONS: This case highlights the pitfalls in diagnosing DIG, which can mimic a rhabdomyosarcoma. Furthermore, it underscores the importance of re-evaluating the grading of these tumors or at least segregating the variants where the prognosis may be more guarded.
Asunto(s)
Desmina/biosíntesis , Ganglioglioma/metabolismo , Rabdomiosarcoma/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Supratentoriales/metabolismo , Cesárea , Citogenética , Desmina/genética , Diagnóstico Diferencial , Ganglioglioma/diagnóstico , Ganglioglioma/ultraestructura , Humanos , Procesamiento de Imagen Asistido por Computador , Inmunohistoquímica , Recién Nacido , Antígeno Ki-67/análisis , Imagen por Resonancia Magnética , Masculino , Microscopía Electrónica , Neuroglía/patología , Neuroglía/ultraestructura , Neuronas/patología , Neuronas/ultraestructura , Pronóstico , Rabdomiosarcoma/ultraestructura , Neoplasias Supratentoriales/diagnóstico , Neoplasias Supratentoriales/diagnóstico por imagen , Ultrasonografía PrenatalRESUMEN
Radical scavenging activities are attractive properties not only for scientific fields e.g. biomedicine, but for the materials industry. In this study, we report that carbon nanotubes (CNTs) can scavenge radicals from organic peroxides, while radicals from azo-type radical initiators exhibit only a few effects from the presence of CNTs. In addition, experimental results suggest the possibility that captured peroxide radicals generate active radical sites on the CNT surface, from which polymerization can take place. These results indicate the importance of selecting an appropriate radical initiator.
RESUMEN
Aerogels have many attractive properties but are usually costly and mechanically brittle, which always limit their practical applications. While many efforts have been made to reinforce the aerogels, most of the reinforcement efforts sacrifice the transparency or superinsulating properties. Here we report superflexible polyvinylpolymethylsiloxane, (CH2CH(Si(CH3)O2/2))n, aerogels that are facilely prepared from a single precursor vinylmethyldimethoxysilane or vinylmethyldiethoxysilane without organic cross-linkers. The method is based on consecutive processes involving radical polymerization and hydrolytic polycondensation, followed by ultralow-cost, highly scalable, ambient-pressure drying directly from alcohol as a drying medium without any modification or additional solvent exchange. The resulting aerogels and xerogels show a homogeneous, tunable, highly porous, doubly cross-linked nanostructure with the elastic polymethylsiloxane network cross-linked with flexible hydrocarbon chains. An outstanding combination of ultralow cost, high scalability, uniform pore size, high surface area, high transparency, high hydrophobicity, excellent machinability, superflexibility in compression, superflexibility in bending, and superinsulating properties has been achieved in a single aerogel or xerogel. This study represents a significant progress of porous materials and makes the practical applications of transparent flexible aerogel-based superinsulators realistic.