edited by Gareth Hougham, Patrick E. Cassidy, Ken Johns, Theodore Davidson.
PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Specific Material Designation and Extent of Item
XVII, 408 p. :
Other Physical Details
online resource.
SERIES
Series Title
Topics in Applied Chemistry
CONTENTS NOTE
Text of Note
Processing, Structure, and Properties -- A Perspective on Solid State Microstructure in Polytetrafluoroethylene -- Teflon® AF: A Family of Amorphous Fluoropolymers with Extraordinary Properties -- Supercritical Fluids for Coatings\U+2014\from Analysis to Xenon -- Material Properties of Fluoropolymers and Perfluoroalkyl-based Polymers -- Excimer Laser-induced Ablation of Doped Poly(Tetrafluoroethylene) -- Novel Solvent and Dispersant Systems for Fluoropolymers and Silicones -- Fluoropolymer Alloys -- Solubility of Poly(Tetrafluoroethylene) and its Copolymers -- Structure-property Relationships of Coatings Based on Perfluoropolyether Macromers -- Modeling and Simulation -- Molecular Modeling of Fluoropolymers: Polytetrafluoroethylene -- Material Behavior of Poly(Vinylidene Fluoride) Deduced from Molecular Modeling -- Application of Chemical Graph Theory for the Estimation of the Dielectric Constant of Polyimides -- Fluorine-containing Polyimides -- Fluorine-containing Polyimides -- Synthesis and Properties of Perfluorinated Polyimides -- Synthesis and Properties of Partially Fluorinated Polyimides for Optical Applications -- Novel Organo-soluble Fluorinated Polyimides for Optical, Microelectronic, and Fiber Applications -- Application of 19F-NMR Toward Chemistry of Imide Materials in Solution.
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SUMMARY OR ABSTRACT
Text of Note
The fluorine atom, by virtue of its electronegativity, size and bond strength with carbon, can be used to create compounds with remarkable properties. Small molecules containing fluorine have many positive impacts on everyday life of which blood substitutes, pharmaceuticals and surface modifiers are only a few examples. Fluoropolymers, too, while traditionally associated with extreme high-performance applications have found their way into our homes, our clothing and even our language. Much progress has been made in understanding the sometimes confounding properties of fluoropolymers. Computer simulation is now contributing to this with new fluorine force fields and other parameters, bringing realistic prediction within reach of the practicing physical chemist. Fluoropolymers 1: Synthesis and Fluoropolymers 2: Properties attempt to bring together in one place the chemistry, physics and engineering properties of fluoropolymers. The collection was intended to provide balance between breadth and depth, with contributions ranging from the introduction of fluoropolymer structure-property relationships, to reviews of subfields, to more focused topical reports.