Polymer Gels, Materials That Combine Liquid and Solid Properties
- 1 August 1991
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in MRS Bulletin
- Vol. 16 (8) , 44-48
- https://doi.org/10.1557/s0883769400056347
Abstract
We are accustomed to thinking of matter as being in one of three states: solid, liquid, or gas. Nature, however, has provided us with a marvelous intermediate state, the gel. Industrial applications are just beginning to explore the advantageous gel properties as adhesive, superabsorber, damper, membrane, toner, catalyst support, etc. Gels are good adhesives since they combine the surface wetting property of liquids with the cohesive strength of solids. Strong adhesion and damping properties suggest gels as a binder in composite materials. For example, the car of the future may operate at a much reduced noise level due to a thin layer of gel in its body. Widespread technical applications have not yet materialized because, until recently, it was difficult to measure gel behavior. This has changed, and as a consequence, gels can now be manufactured with reproducible properties. What the many possible types of gelation processes have in common is that molecules connect into a three-dimensional network structure. Junctions between molecules form as chemical bonds (cross-links) or physical associations (such as crystalline or glassy domains, hydrogen bonds, etc.). The molecular architecture determines the gel properties in ways which have yet to be explored. Typical parameters are the monomer building block, molecular size, branching, chain stiffness, cross-link functionality, and solvent content.Keywords
This publication has 23 references indexed in Scilit:
- Composition dependence of the viscoelasticity of end-linked poly(dimethylsiloxane) at the gel pointMacromolecules, 1991
- The relaxation of polymers with linear flexible chains of uniform lengthRheologica Acta, 1990
- Evolution of structure and viscoelasticity in an epoxy near the sol-gel transitionMacromolecules, 1990
- Relaxation of entangled polymers at the classical gel pointJournal de Physique, 1990
- Determination of discrete relaxation and retardation time spectra from dynamic mechanical dataRheologica Acta, 1989
- Micronetworks by end-linking of polystyrene. 2. Dynamic mechanical behavior and diffusion experiments in the bulkMacromolecules, 1989
- Evolution of rheology during chemical gelationColloid and Polymer Science, 1987
- Rigidity and ergodicity of randomly cross-linked macromoleculesPhysical Review Letters, 1987
- Constitutive relationships for polymeric materials with power-law distributions of relaxation timesRheologica Acta, 1985
- Block copolymers near the microphase separation transition. 2. Linear dynamic mechanical propertiesMacromolecules, 1984