Chemistry:Smart inorganic polymers

From HandWiki

Smart inorganic polymers (SIPs) are inorganic polymers with tunable (smart) properties such as stimuli responsive physical properties (shape, conductivity, rheology). While organic polymers are often petrol-based, the backbone of SIPs is made from elements other than carbon which lessens the burden on scarce non-renewable resources or even provide alternatives to them (sustainability). Discoveries in the past decades revealed the potential of inorganic polymers for broad applicability in diverse fields.[1][2][3] Inorganic polymers may provide greater consumer safety owing to improved properties and environmental compatibility (no need for plasticizers, intrinsically flame-retardant properties), technological and economic advancement (solid polymer electrolytes for consumer electronics based on polymers with a low glass-transition temperature), molecular electronics with non-metal elements as improvement and replacement for metal-based conductors and electronic circuits. Recent developments in the field of Smart Inorganic Polymers have been summarized in a themed collection in the scientific journal Chemical Society Reviews.[4]

References

  1. Chivers, T. ; Manners, I. “Inorganic Rings and Polymers of the p-Block Elements” RSC Publishing, Cambridge, UK: 2009. ISBN:978-1-84755-906-7.
  2. :de:P-Ink
  3. Baumgartner, T. ; Jaekle, F. “Main Group Strategies towards Functional Hybrid Materials" Wiley: 2018. ISBN:978-1-119-23597-2.
  4. Themed Collection: Smart Inorganic Polymers, 2016, link