2004
DOI: 10.1002/pi.1438
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Review: The adsorption of functional polymers from their organic solutions: applications to fuel additives

Abstract: Functional polymers are used as additives in the formulation of fuels either for their detergency properties or for retaining cold weather operability. Examples of recent research work aimed at a better understanding of the physico‐chemical phenomena involved and at the design and synthesis of new polymers are described. One phenomenon common in most applications is the adsorption of the polymers on various surfaces (gums, soot, metal walls, paraffin crystals). In the case of chain‐end functional polymers, str… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(15 citation statements)
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“…all of the functionalised monomers were linked together as a block at one end of the overall polymer rather than being randomly distributed along the whole polymer chain. This is probably because several functional monomers grouped together in a block copolymer molecule adsorb much more rapidly than when the functional groups are scattered throughout the polymer chain in random copolymers and also give higher coverage since the non-polar block segment can stretch away from the surface eventually to form a "brush" configuration [185] [186].…”
Section: Recent Research On Functionalised Polymer Additivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…all of the functionalised monomers were linked together as a block at one end of the overall polymer rather than being randomly distributed along the whole polymer chain. This is probably because several functional monomers grouped together in a block copolymer molecule adsorb much more rapidly than when the functional groups are scattered throughout the polymer chain in random copolymers and also give higher coverage since the non-polar block segment can stretch away from the surface eventually to form a "brush" configuration [185] [186].…”
Section: Recent Research On Functionalised Polymer Additivesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Polyisobutene (PIB) derivatives bearing polar functional groups and with molecular weight range of 500–5 000 find various important technological applications in many fields. For example, polyisobutene succinic anhydrides (PIBSAs) and their succinimide (PIBSI) derivatives are widely employed as detergent‐dispersant additives in lubricants or fuel formulations 1, 2…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When used as a fuel component, polyisobutylene succinimide with a polyamine (PAM) polar head and a PIB tail, strongly decreases carbonaceous deposits on the metallic surfaces of the engine, thus ensuring efficient combustion and preventing car performances reduction. Furthermore, in lubricants, PIBSI derivatives actually act as polymeric dispersants; PAM, in fact, adsorbs on the surface of the deposits (e.g., soot) or on metallic components, while the PIB tail gives rise to steric stabilization of particles thus avoiding further aggregation and adhesion 2…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The low affinity manifested by a low slope of the adsorption isotherm which characterized the balance of the free energy of adsorption of the PBMA blocks on the PBMA latex and the entropic term of the conformational free energy of the PMANa blocks that stretched radially. Such a behavior has already been observed with block copolymers for various surfaces and solvents [24][25][26][27]. Depending on the copolymer structure, the adsorption strength and adsorbed amount at the plateau were quite different.…”
Section: Adsorption Isotherms On Latex Surfacementioning
confidence: 73%