“…To address the emerging challenge, a growing body of research on PP insulation materials has been conducted to balance their thermo-mechanical and electrical performance. The main modification methods include chemical grafting and copolymerizing, physical blending, as well as nanocomposites. − Among them, chemical copolymerizing, i.e., in-reactor alloy technology, seems to be a promising strategy, where propylene is copolymerized with other olefin monomers (e.g., ethylene, butylene, etc.) in the homopolypropylene porous powders. , As a result, a PP-based multiphase system is achieved in the reactors, including homopolypropylene as the continuous phase and PP-based intrinsic elastomer as the dispersion phase. − Particularly, owing to the continuous in situ copolymerization, the dispersed phase size of in-reactor alloy (in the scale of less than a micron dimension) is much smaller and more uniform than that of traditional blends, thus improving comprehensive performance effectively. , Furthermore, in-reactor alloy technology makes it possible to produce a multiphase polymer with sequential polymerization .…”