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Title: Chemical functionalization of silica and alumina particles for dispersion in carbon dioxide. Author: Visintin PM, Carbonell RG, Schauer CK, Desimone JM. Journal: Langmuir; 2005 May 24; 21(11):4816-23. PubMed ID: 15896018. Abstract: The steric stabilization and flocculation of modified silica and alumina particle suspensions in condensed CO(2) were studied. Silica particles (average diameters of 7 and 12 nm) were functionalized using chlorosilanes of the form C(n)F(2n+1)CH(2)CH(2)Si(CH(3))(2)Cl (n = 8, 4, or 1) to give C(n)F(2n+1)-silica. Alumina particles (diameter of 8-14 nm) were grafted with C(8)F(17)CH(2)CH(2)Si(OEt)(3) and chemically modified with perfluorononanoic acid to yield C(8)F(17)-alumina and C(8)F(17)COOH-alumina, respectively. Elemental analysis and thermogravimetric analysis on the derivatized particles were carried out, and surface coverage was calculated. The stabilization of these modified particles in condensed CO(2) was quantified using turbidimetry. Particle stability was found to increase with increasing fluorinated tail length, temperature, and CO(2) density. Unmodified particles and those modified with only -CF(3) tails were unstable in condensed CO(2). Stabilization in supercritical CO(2) is continuous up to 24 h for the C(n)F(2n+1)-silica (n >/= 4) particles and 96 h for the C(8)F(17)-alumina particles. The C(8)F(17)COOH-alumina particles gave a significantly higher graft density than the C(8)F(17)-alumina particles but are not as stable in CO(2). The C(8)F(17)-alumina particles were stable at lower CO(2) densities than the modified silica particles. This stability difference may be attributed to the precursor organosilanes being monofunctional (modified silica) versus trifunctional (modified alumina), producing different structures on the surface.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]