TY - JOUR
T1 - Light and latex
T2 - advances in the photochemistry of polymer colloids
AU - Scott, Philip J.
AU - Kasprzak, Christopher R.
AU - Feller, Keyton D.
AU - Meenakshisundaram, Viswanath
AU - Williams, Christopher B.
AU - Long, Timothy E.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors acknowledge the National Science Foundation for financial support (CMMI-1762712).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2020/6/7
Y1 - 2020/6/7
N2 - Unparalleled temporal and spatial control of colloidal chemical processes introduces immense potential for the manufacturing, modification, and manipulation of latex particles. This review highlights major advances in photochemistry, both as stimulus and response, to generate unprecedented functionality in polymer colloids. Light-based chemical modification generates polymer particles with unique structural complexity, and the incorporation of photoactive functionalities transforms inert particles into photoactive nanodevices. Latex photo-functionality, which is reflected in both the colloidal and coalesced states, enables photochromism, photoswitchable aggregation, tunable fluorescence, photoactivated crosslinking and solidification, and photomechanical actuation. Previous literature explores the capacity of photochemistry, which complements the rheological and processing advantages of latex, to expand beyond traditional coatings applications and enable disruptive technologies in critical areas including nanomedicine, data security, and additive manufacturing. This journal is
AB - Unparalleled temporal and spatial control of colloidal chemical processes introduces immense potential for the manufacturing, modification, and manipulation of latex particles. This review highlights major advances in photochemistry, both as stimulus and response, to generate unprecedented functionality in polymer colloids. Light-based chemical modification generates polymer particles with unique structural complexity, and the incorporation of photoactive functionalities transforms inert particles into photoactive nanodevices. Latex photo-functionality, which is reflected in both the colloidal and coalesced states, enables photochromism, photoswitchable aggregation, tunable fluorescence, photoactivated crosslinking and solidification, and photomechanical actuation. Previous literature explores the capacity of photochemistry, which complements the rheological and processing advantages of latex, to expand beyond traditional coatings applications and enable disruptive technologies in critical areas including nanomedicine, data security, and additive manufacturing. This journal is
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U2 - 10.1039/d0py00349b
DO - 10.1039/d0py00349b
M3 - Review article
AN - SCOPUS:85088565565
SN - 1759-9954
VL - 11
SP - 3498
EP - 3524
JO - Polymer Chemistry
JF - Polymer Chemistry
IS - 21
ER -