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Journal ArticleDOI

Emulsion-templated porous polymers: drying condition-dependent properties.

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TLDR
In this paper, the fabrication of macroporous polymers from oil-in-water HIPEs by simultaneous ring-opening polymerization and interface-catalyzed condensation, without heating or removal of oxygen.
Abstract
Macroporous materials templated using high internal phase emulsions (HIPEs) are promising for various applications. To date, new strategies to create emulsion-templated porous materials and to tune their properties (especially wetting properties) are still highly required. Here, we report the fabrication of macroporous polymers from oil-in-water HIPEs, bereft of conventional monomers and crosslinking monomers, by simultaneous ring-opening polymerization and interface-catalyzed condensation, without heating or removal of oxygen. The resulting macroporous polymers showed drying condition-dependent wetting properties (e.g., hydrophilicity–oleophilicity from freezing drying, hydrophilicity–oleophobicity from vacuum drying, and amphiphobicity from heat drying), densities (from 0.019 to 0.350 g cc−1), and compressive properties. Hydrophilic–oleophilic and amphiphobic porous polymers turned hydrophilic–oleophobic simply by heating and protonation, respectively. The hydrophilic–oleophobic porous polymers could remove a small amount of water from oil–water mixtures (including surfactant-stabilized water-in-oil emulsions) by selective absorption and could remove water-soluble dyes from oil–water mixtures. Moreover, the transition in wetting properties enabled the removal of water and dyes in a controlled manner. The feature that combines simply preparation, tunable wetting properties and densities, robust compression, high absorption capacity (rate) and controllable absorption makes the porous polymers to be excellent candidates for the removal of water and water-soluble dyes from oil–water mixtures.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Preparation of polymer-based foam for efficient oil-water separation based on surface engineering.

TL;DR: In this article , a polymer-based foam exhibited high efficiency oil-water separation performance in different pH environments, and the modified foam maintained good hydrophobicity and oil removal rate in a wide pH range.
Journal ArticleDOI

Microphase-separated, magnetic macroporous polymers with amphiphilic swelling from emulsion templating

TL;DR: PolyHIPEs are promising for various applications associated with liquid uptakes as mentioned in this paper , however, polyHIPE from a reactive, monomeric block copolymer can exhibit amphiphilic swelling.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emulsion-templated, hydrophilic-oleophobic aerogels with flexibility, stretchability and recyclability

TL;DR: In this article , an interface-initiated condensation of perfluorooctyltriethriethoxysilane within the dispersed phase and subsequent solidification of external aqueous phase through poly(vinyl alcohol) gelation was reported.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emulsion-Templated, Magnetic, Hydrophilic–Oleophobic Composites for Controlled Water Removal

- 15 Jan 2022 - 
TL;DR: In this article , the authors report the fabrication of magnetic, hydrophilic-oleophobic polyHIPE composites from reactive Fe3O4 nanoparticle-stabilized high internal phase emulsions through simultaneous bulk polymerization of water-soluble monomers and interface-catalyzed polycondensation of 1H,1H,2H,3H-perfluorooctyltriethoxysilane.
Journal ArticleDOI

Emulsion-templated, hydrophilic and underwater oleophobic PVA aerogels with enhanced mechanical property

TL;DR: In this paper , an emulsion-templated, hydrophilic and underwater oleophobic polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) aerogels with enhanced mechanical properties were used for solar steam evaporation from oil-containing salt aqueous solution.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

PolyHIPEs: Recent advances in emulsion-templated porous polymers

TL;DR: Porous emulsion-templated polymers are highly viscous, paste-like emulsions in which the major, "internal" phase, usually defined as constituting more than 74% of the volume, is dispersed within the continuous, minor, "external" phase.
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A Superamphiphobic Coating with an Ammonia-Triggered Transition to Superhydrophilic and Superoleophobic for Oil–Water Separation†

TL;DR: A new superamphiphobic coating that turns superhydrophilic and superoleophobic upon ammonia exposure is reported herein, which may lead to the development of advanced oil-water separation techniques.
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Morphology and Surface Area of Emulsion-Derived (PolyHIPE) Solid Foams Prepared with Oil-Phase Soluble Porogenic Solvents: Span 80 as Surfactant

TL;DR: In particular, relatively polar solvents that are able to transport water through the emulsion continuous phase (Ostwald ripening) are shown to produce much lower surface areas than analogous resins prepared by homogeneous solution polymerization of divinylbenzene.
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Emulsion-templated porous polymers: A retrospective perspective

TL;DR: PolyHIPEs as mentioned in this paper are porous emulsion-templated polymers synthesized within high internal phase emulsions (HIPE), which are highly viscous, paste-like emulsionions in which the major, "internal" phase, usually defined as constituting more than 74% of the volume, is dispersed as discrete droplets within the continuous, minor, "external" phase.
Journal ArticleDOI

Adaptive and freeze-tolerant heteronetwork organohydrogels with enhanced mechanical stability over a wide temperature range

TL;DR: The organogel component can inhibit the ice crystallization of the hydrogel component, thus enhancing the mechanical stability of organohydrogel over a wide temperature range (−78 to 80 °C), and may have promising applications in complex and harsh environments.
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