All Stories

  1. Thermal decomposition of cellulosic materials: Insights into mechanisms and product evolution
  2. Advanced Polyamidoamine Hydrogels for the Selective Cleaning of Artifacts in Heritage Conservation
  3. Enhancing Cotton Fabrics Through Grafting of Glycine-Based Polyamidoamine
  4. Ecotoxicity Assessment of α-Amino Acid-Derived Polyamidoamines Using Zebrafish as a Vertebrate Model
  5. Synergism between α-amino acid-derived polyamidoamines and sodium montmorillonite for enhancing the flame retardancy of cotton fabrics
  6. The Seed Germination Test as a Valuable Tool for the Short-Term Phytotoxicity Screening of Water-Soluble Polyamidoamines
  7. On the Suitability of Phosphonate-Containing Polyamidoamines as Cotton Flame Retardants
  8. Silk/Polyamidoamine Membranes for Removing Chromium VI from Water
  9. Toughening Polyamidoamine Hydrogels through Covalent Grafting of Short Silk Fibers
  10. L-Arginine-Derived Polyamidoamine Oligomers Bearing at Both Ends β-Cyclodextrin Units as pH-Sensitive Curcumin Carriers
  11. The Thermo-Oxidative Behavior of Cotton Coated with an Intumescent Flame Retardant Glycine-Derived Polyamidoamine: A Multi-Technique Study
  12. Polyamidoamines Derived from Natural α-Amino Acids as Effective Flame Retardants for Cotton
  13. Semi-Crystalline Hydrophobic Polyamidoamines: A New Family of Technological Materials?
  14. Highlight on the Mechanism of Linear Polyamidoamine Degradation in Water
  15. pH-Dependent Chiral Recognition of D- and L-Arginine Derived Polyamidoamino Acids by Self-Assembled Sodium Deoxycholate
  16. Hydrogen Bonding in a l-Glutamine-Based Polyamidoamino Acid and its pH-Dependent Self-Ordered Coil Conformation
  17. Sulfur-Based Copolymeric Polyamidoamines as Efficient Flame-Retardants for Cotton
  18. Superior flame retardancy of cotton by synergetic effect of cellulose-derived nano-graphene oxide carbon dots and disulphide-containing polyamidoamines
  19. Controlled Synthesis of Linear Polyamidoamino Acids
  20. Mucin Thin Layers: A Model for Mucus-Covered Tissues
  21. Improving Mechanical Properties and Reaction to Fire of EVA/LLDPE Blends for Cable Applications with Melamine Triazine and Bentonite Clay
  22. d-, l- and d,l-Tryptophan-Based Polyamidoamino Acids: pH-Dependent Structuring and Fluorescent Properties
  23. Layer-by-layer-assembled chitosan/phosphorylated cellulose nanofibrils as a bio-based and flame protecting nano-exoskeleton on PU foams
  24. Self-Structuring in Water of Polyamidoamino Acids with Hydrophobic Side Chains Deriving from Natural α-Amino Acids
  25. Disulfide-containing polyamidoamines with remarkable flame retardant activity for cotton fabrics
  26. Flame Retardant Multilayered Coatings on Acrylic Fabrics Prepared by One-Step Deposition of Chitosan/Montmorillonite Complexes
  27. Linear polyamidoamines as novel biocompatible phosphorus-free surface-confined intumescent flame retardants for cotton fabrics
  28. Self-Ordering Secondary Structure of d- and l-Arginine-Derived Polyamidoamino Acids
  29. Improving the Flame Retardant Efficiency of Layer by Layer Coatings Containing Deoxyribonucleic Acid by Post-Diffusion of Hydrotalcite Sanoparticles
  30. Flame retardancy of flexible polyurethane foams
  31. All-Inorganic Intumescent Nanocoating Containing Montmorillonite Nanoplatelets in Ammonium Polyphosphate Matrix Capable of Preventing Cotton Ignition
  32. Recent Advances in the Design of Water Based-Flame Retardant Coatings for Polyester and Polyester-Cotton Blends
  33. Silica precursor as synergist for cotton flame retardancy
  34. DNA Coatings from Byproducts: A Panacea for the Flame Retardancy of EVA, PP, ABS, PET, and PA6?
  35. Influence of layer by layer coatings containing octapropylammonium polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxane and ammonium polyphosphate on the thermal stability and flammability of acrylic fabrics
  36. Ultra-Fast Layer-by-Layer Approach for Depositing Flame Retardant Coatings on Flexible PU Foams within Seconds
  37. Intumescence: Tradition versus novelty. A comprehensive review
  38. All-polymer Layer by Layer coating as efficient solution to polyurethane foam flame retardancy
  39. How much the fabric grammage may affect cotton combustion?
  40. Thermal Degradation of Cellulose and Cellulosic Substrates
  41. Thermal and flame retardant properties of ethylene vinyl acetate copolymers containing deoxyribose nucleic acid or ammonium polyphosphate
  42. Starch-Based Layer by Layer Assembly: Efficient and Sustainable Approach to Cotton Fire Protection
  43. DNA coatings on cotton fabrics: Effect of molecular size and pH on flame retardancy
  44. Synergistic effects occurring between water glasses and urea/ammonium dihydrogen phosphate pair for enhancing the flame retardancy of cotton
  45. Functionalization of cellulose fibres with DOPO-polysilsesquioxane flame retardant nanocoating
  46. Thermal degradation of DNA, an all-in-one natural intumescent flame retardant
  47. Layer by layer assembly of flame retardant thin films on closed cell PET foams: Efficiency of ammonium polyphosphate versus DNA
  48. Cotton flame retardancy: state of the art and future perspectives
  49. Bulk vs. surface flame retardancy of fully bio-based polyamide 10,10
  50. Few durable layers suppress cotton combustion due to the joint combination of layer by layer assembly and UV-curing
  51. Tunable thermal and flame response of phosphonated oligoallylamines layer by layer assemblies on cotton
  52. A Comparative Analysis of Nanoparticle Adsorption as Fire-Protection Approach for Fabrics
  53. ChemInform Abstract: Biomacromolecules as Novel Green Flame Retardant Systems for Textiles: An Overview
  54. Sodium montmorillonite effect on the morphology, thermal, flame retardant and mechanical properties of semi-finished leather
  55. Plasticizers, antioxidants and reinforcement fillers from hazelnut skin and cocoa by-products: Extraction and use in PLA and PP
  56. Materials engineering for surface-confined flame retardancy
  57. Biomacromolecules as novel green flame retardant systems for textiles: an overview
  58. UV-cured hybrid organic–inorganic Layer by Layer assemblies: Effect on the flame retardancy of polycarbonate films
  59. Intumescent features of nucleic acids and proteins
  60. Current emerging techniques to impart flame retardancy to fabrics: An overview
  61. Thermal degradation of DNA-treated cotton fabrics under different heating conditions
  62. A new era for flame retardant materials?
  63. Self-assembled hybrid nanoarchitectures deposited on poly(urethane) foams capable of chemically adapting to extreme heat
  64. Flame Retardancy of Polyester and Polyester–Cotton Blends Treated with Caseins
  65. Cellulose extracted from rice husk as filler for poly(lactic acid): preparation and characterization
  66. Bulk or surface treatments of ethylene vinyl acetate copolymers with DNA: Investigation on the flame retardant properties
  67. Rice husk as bio-source of silica: preparation and characterization of PLA–silica bio-composites
  68. Sol–gel derived architectures for enhancing cotton flame retardancy: Effect of pure and phosphorus-doped silica phases
  69. Caseins and hydrophobins as novel green flame retardants for cotton fabrics
  70. Permeation Behavior of Polysulfone Membranes Modified by Fully Organic Layer-by-Layer Assemblies
  71. Flame retardant high density polyethylene optimized by on-line ultrasound extrusion
  72. Thermal stability and flame retardancy of polyester fabrics sol–gel treated in the presence of boehmite nanoparticles
  73. Flammability and combustion properties of ammonium polyphosphate-/poly(acrylic acid)- based layer by layer architectures deposited on cotton, polyester and their blends
  74. Thermal stability, flame retardancy and abrasion resistance of cotton and cotton–linen blends treated by sol–gel silica coatings containing alumina micro- or nano-particles
  75. Green DNA-based flame retardant coatings assembled through Layer by Layer
  76. Poly(lactic acid)-Based Composites Containing Natural Fillers: Thermal, Mechanical and Barrier Properties
  77. Flame Retardancy of Polyester Fabrics Treated by Spray-Assisted Layer-by-Layer Silica Architectures
  78. Intrinsic intumescent-like flame retardant properties of DNA-treated cotton fabrics
  79. Thermal stability and flame resistance of cotton fabrics treated with whey proteins
  80. Synthesis and characterization of graphene-based nanocomposites with potential use for biomedical applications
  81. The role of pre-hydrolysis on multi step sol–gel processes for enhancing the flame retardancy of cotton
  82. Phosphorus- and nitrogen-doped silica coatings for enhancing the flame retardancy of cotton: Synergisms or additive effects?
  83. Layer by layer nanoarchitectures for the surface protection of polycarbonate
  84. Heating rate effect on char yield from cotton, poly(ethylene terephthalate) and blend fabrics
  85. DNA: a novel, green, natural flame retardant and suppressant for cotton
  86. Layer by Layer coatings assembled through dipping, vertical or horizontal spray for cotton flame retardancy
  87. Multi-component flame resistant coating techniques for textiles
  88. Influence of ammonium polyphosphate-/poly(acrylic acid)-based layer by layer architectures on the char formation in cotton, polyester and their blends
  89. Cotton fabrics treated with novel oxidic phases acting as effective smoke suppressants
  90. Hybrid phosphorus-doped silica architectures derived from a multistep sol–gel process for improving thermal stability and flame retardancy of cotton fabrics
  91. Combustion characteristics of cellulosic loose fibres
  92. Thermal, rheological, and barrier properties of waterborne acrylic nanocomposite coatings based on boehmite or organo-modified montmorillonite
  93. Heat and moisture transfer in sol–gel treated cotton fabrics
  94. Layer by Layer ammonium polyphosphate-based coatings for flame retardancy of polyester–cotton blends
  95. Cyclodextrin nanosponges as novel green flame retardants for PP, LLDPE and PA6
  96. Layer by layer complex architectures based on ammonium polyphosphate, chitosan and silica on polyester-cotton blends: flammability and combustion behaviour
  97. Thermal stability, flame retardancy and mechanical properties of cotton fabrics treated with inorganic coatings synthesized through sol–gel processes
  98. State of the art and perspectives on sol–gel derived hybrid architectures for flame retardancy of textiles
  99. Sol–gel treatments on cotton fabrics for improving thermal and flame stability: Effect of the structure of the alkoxysilane precursor
  100. Textile Flame Retardancy Through Surface-Assembled Nanoarchitectures
  101. Thermal and fire stability of cotton fabrics coated with hybrid phosphorus-doped silica films
  102. Evaluation of nonconventional additives as fire retardants on polyamide 6,6: Phosphorous-based master batch, α-zirconium dihydrogen phosphate, and β-cyclodextrin based nanosponges
  103. Role of β-cyclodextrin nanosponges in polypropylene photooxidation
  104. Thermal properties and combustion behavior of POSS- and bohemite-finished cotton fabrics
  105. Optimization of the procedure to burn textile fabrics by cone calorimeter: part II. Results on nanoparticle-finished polyester
  106. Cotton fabrics treated with hybrid organic–inorganic coatings obtained through dual-cure processes
  107. Novel flame retardant finishing systems for cotton fabrics based on phosphorus-containing compounds and silica derived from sol–gel processes
  108. Layer-by-layer assembly of silica-based flame retardant thin film on PET fabric
  109. Influence of surface activation by plasma and nanoparticle adsorption on the morphology, thermal stability and combustion behavior of PET fabrics
  110. Investigation on flame retardancy of poly(ethylene terephthalate) for plastics and textiles by combination of an organo-modified sepiolite and Zn phosphinate
  111. Recent findings in (Ti)POSS-based polymer systems
  112. α-Zirconium phosphate-based nanoarchitectures on polyester fabrics through layer-by-layer assembly
  113. Hydrotalcite and nanometric silica as finishing additives to enhance the thermal stability and flame retardancy of cotton
  114. Sol–gel treatments for enhancing flame retardancy and thermal stability of cotton fabrics: optimisation of the process and evaluation of the durability
  115. Fire-retardant poly(ethylene terephthalate) by combination of expandable graphite and layered clays for plastics and textiles
  116. Novel flame retardants containing cyclodextrin nanosponges and phosphorus compounds to enhance EVA combustion properties
  117. Optimization of the procedure to burn textile fabrics by cone calorimeter: Part I. Combustion behavior of polyester
  118. Flame retardancy properties of α-zirconium phosphate based composites
  119. Thermal stability and flame retardancy of polyester, cotton, and relative blend textile fabrics subjected to sol-gel treatments
  120. Investigation of the thermal degradation of PET, zinc phosphinate, OMPOSS and their blends—Identification of the formed species
  121. Synthesis and photoelectrical properties of carbon nanotube–dendritic porphyrin light harvesting molecule systems
  122. Enhancement of photoelectrical properties in polymer nanocomposites containing modified single-walled carbon nanotubes by conducting dendrimer
  123. Selective interaction of single-walled carbon nanotubes with conducting dendrimer