Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Interfaces
Towards Advanced Functional Materials

1. Auflage Januar 2018
XXXII, 977 Seiten, Hardcover
346 Abbildungen (192 Farbabbildungen)
Handbuch/Nachschlagewerk
Kurzbeschreibung
Das erste Handbuch und gut zugängliche Referenzwerk zu diesem zunehmend wichtigen Thema erläutert in einem anwendungsorientierten Ansatz Synthese, Design, Charakterisierung und Simulation von Grenzflächen bei hybriden organisch-anorganischen Materialien.
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Hybrid organic-inorganic materials and the rational design of their interfaces open up the access to a wide spectrum of functionalities not achievable with traditional concepts of materials science. This innovative class of materials has a major impact in many application domains such as optics, electronics, mechanics, energy storage and conversion, protective coatings, catalysis, sensing and nanomedicine. The properties of these materials do not only depend on the chemical structure, and the mutual interaction between their nano-scale building blocks, but are also strongly influenced by the interfaces they share.
This handbook focuses on the most recent investigations concerning the design, control, and dynamics of hybrid organic-inorganic interfaces, covering: (i) characterization methods of interfaces, (ii) innovative computational approaches and simulation of interaction processes, (iii) in-situ studies of dynamic aspects controlling the formation of these interfaces, and (iv) the role of the interface for process optimization, devices, and applications in such areas as optics, electronics, energy and medicine.
Clay-Organic Interfaces for Design of Functional Hybrid Materials
Hybrid Nanocomposites Based on Prussian Blue Type Nanoparticles Included into Polysaccharides Matrixes
Self-Healing Thermosetting Composites: Concepts, Chemistry and Future Advances
Silica Polymer Interface and Mechanical Reinforcement in Rubber Nanocomposites
Sustainable Organic-Inorganic Interfaces in Energy Applications and Devices
Tough and Stretchable Hydrogels and Their Utilization in Integrated Electronics
Grafting of Conjugated Polymers on Inorganic Substrates: Elaboration of Novel Hybrid Interface for Organic Electronic
Hybrid Organic-Inorganic Nanostructures for Spin Switching and Spintronic
Application of Sol-Gel Method to Synthesize Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Coatings to Minimize Corrosion in Metallic
Gas-Organic and Gas-Inorganic Interfacial Effects in Gas-Adsorbent Interactions: the Case of CO2/ CH4 Separation
Design and Characterization of MOFs (Metal Organic Frameworks) for Innovative Applications
Ionic Liquid Based Approaches to Carbon Materials Synthesis
PART II. THE INTERFACE OF HYBRID MATERIALS IN BIOAPPLICATIONS
Ionic Liquid-Assisted Synthesis of Biomaterials
Interface Engineering with Self-Assembled Monolayers in Biosensors
Coordination Polymers for Medical Applications: Amorphous Versus Crystalline Materials
Chemical Adjustment of the Interface Between Silicate Nanoparticles and Biological Media for Imaging and Therapy
High Pressure Hydrothermal Procedure: A Tool for Surface Modification of Super-Paramagnetic Nanostructured Materials for Medical Applications
Silica-Based Organic-Inorganic Hybrid Nanomaterials for Bioimaging
Lanthanide-Based Nanosystems for Multimodal Imaging
Bio-Hybrids
PART III. INTERFACES MODELING AND IN- AND EX- SITU CHARACTERIZATION TECHNIQUES
In-Situ and Ex-Situ Electrochemical Measurements: Spectroelectrochemistry and Atomic Force Microscopy
Nuclear Magnetic Resonance as a Tool for the Investigation of the Interfaces and Textures of Nanostructured Hybrid Materials
Electrostatic Force Microscopy Techniques for Interphase Characterization
Electron Paramagnetic Resonance as a Tool for in-Situ Characterization of Hybrid Interfaces and Nanomaterials
In-Situ Interface Control Techniques for Advanced Hybrid Materials
Influence of Gold-Surface Interactions on the Josephin Domain Dimerization Mechanism: A Computational Study
SANO Methodology for Simulating Self-Assembly Patterns of Organic Molecules over Metal Surfaces
Andreas Taubert is Professor of Supramolecular Chemistry at the University of Potsdam, Germany. After his PhD at the Max-Planck-Institute for Polymer Research in Mainz he was a postdoc at the University of Pennsylvania, USA, and then a group leader at the University of Basel, Switzerland. His research interests are bioinspired hybrid materials and materials chemistry with ionic liquids. Since 2010 he has been one of the organizers of a series of symposia on hybrid materials at the E-MRS Spring Meetings.