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      Chapter

      Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment
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      Chapter

      Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment

      DOI link for Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment

      Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment book

      Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment

      DOI link for Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment

      Tribological Behavior of Ionic Polymer Brushes in Aqueous Environment book

      Edited ByGirma Biresaw, Kash Mittal
      BookSurfactants in Tribology, Volume 3

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      Edition 1st Edition
      First Published 2013
      Imprint CRC Press
      Pages 18
      eBook ISBN 9780429111013
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      ABSTRACT

      The surface-tethering of polymers has become a widely used method for improving the surface physicochemical properties, such as wettability, adhesion, and friction, of solid surfaces. An assembly of polymer chains end-grafted to a solid surface at a sufciently high graft density in a good solvent is generally referred to as a “polymer brush” [1,2]. The graft density is the number of tethered chains at the surfaces per unit area, which largely depends on the preparation process, such as “grafting-to” or “grafting-from.” Over the last decade, various types of well-dened, high-density polymer brushes have been prepared via surface-initiated controlled radical polymerization (CRP). Such brushes are grown from surface initiating sites that are immobilized on solid surfaces or substrates through covalent bonding. As a result, the brush chains are strongly anchored and are hardly detached from the substrate, even in a good solvent as well as under large shear deformation. Therefore, the polymer brushes with nanometer-scale thickness can act as an efcient lubricant in friction.

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