Microporous Organic Polymers: Synthesis, Characterization and Applications
A special issue of Polymers (ISSN 2073-4360).
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (25 November 2018) | Viewed by 71160
Special Issue Editors
Interests: organic chemistry; material chemistry; polymers of intrinsic microporosity; gas separation
Interests: polymeric and hybrid membranes for gas and vapour separation; membrane preparation by phase inversion techniques; principles of pure and mixed gas and vapour transport in membranes by sorption and permeation experiments; structural, mechanical, and thermal properties of polymers, polymer blends and hybrid materials; physical aging; polymers of intrinsic microporosity; perfluoropolymer membranes; ionic liquid membraness; carbon dioxide capture
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Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
Microporous organic polymers represent a rapidly-expanding class of amorphous porous materials, composed of fully covalently bound organic building blocks. Depending on the appropriate choice of monomers, functionality and polymerisation method, they can be prepared both as solution processable or as insoluble networked materials. Typical features of microporous organic polymers are pore diameters of less than 2 nm, high internal surface areas and elevated thermal stability, which allow them to be exploited for a broad range of technologically important applications, such as gas storage and separation, heterogeneous catalysis, sensors and electrochemistry, just to name a few.
This Special Issue of Polymers aims to report full research papers, communications and review articles based on the latest advances in the field of synthesis, characterisation and applications of organic microporous polymers. Fields that will be covered are, but are not limited to:
- Synthesis (Polymers of intrinsic microporosity, thermally rearrangeable polymers, porous organic networks)
- Structural characterization
- Modelling
- Applications (i.e., gas sorption and storage, gas permeation, catalysis, heavy metal sorption, energy storage)
Dr. Mariolino Carta
Dr. Johannes Carolus Jansen
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- Microporous polymers
- Polymer synthesis
- Gas sorption and storage
- Gas separation membranes
- High Surface Area
- Internal free volume
- Carbon capture
- Heterogeneous catalysis
- Liquid phase sorption
- Modelling
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