Appukuttan Saritha
Amrita Vishwa Vidyapeetham
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Featured researches published by Appukuttan Saritha.
Journal of Elastomers and Plastics | 2017
Sreedha Sambhudevan; Balakrishnan Shankar; Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph; John Philip; T. Saravanan
Commonly used shielding materials while X-ray imaging by clinical persons is based on lead but incessant contact with this toxic material can pave way to severe health problems. Polymer composites, embedded with lead-free additives, especially based on natural rubber can be chosen as a suitable alternative candidate due to its lightweight, cost-effectiveness and capability to absorb regular energy region of X-ray used in medical imaging. Rubber composites were prepared with modified rare earth oxides at different filler loadings. The characterization of the filler reveals that their size falls in the nanoregime, which, in turn, supplemented to the superior properties of the composites. Mechanical properties were found to increase with filler content. X-ray shielding studies were done at different tube voltages and thicknesses and the results prove the efficacy of materials to be considered as a promising shielding resource.
Liquid Crystalline Polymers: Volume 1–Structure and Chemistry | 2016
K. Y. Sandhya; Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph
Materials from renewable sources are attracting immense attention due to the excellent properties and ecological advantages it can offer and due to the growing environmental concerns. Liquid crystalline polymers (LCP) from renewable sources have engrossed considerable attention during the past few decades. Nowadays, agro based renewable materials are the subject of a growing number of academic and industrial research projects, because of diminishing fossil resources combined with the increasing environmental concern of petroleum based polymers. Renewable resources such as cellulose, vegetable oils and other plant and animal originated products are ideal alternatives to provide base chemicals for various materials, as they are abundant throughout the world and contain several reactive chemical sites such as double bonds, allylic carbons, ester groups, and the alpha carbons of the ester groups, which can be used for polymerization. LCPs can be successfully synthesized from a good number of natural sources including cardanol, castor oil and can be derived from biopolymers such as cellulose, DNA, proteins etc. The study of liquid crystal phases of cellulosic esters and ethers become attractive owing to their properties such as toughness and processability. Cardanol obtained from cashew nut shell liquid possesses functional groups for creating polymers and has interesting structure for exhibiting liquid crystalline properties. Cardanol based LCP can form cross linked network polymers due to the unsaturation of side chains and possibly can freeze the liquid crystalline phase. On the other hand liquid crystal properties of cellulose in electro optical applications open new horizons for these traditional materials. A milestone in the development of nano cellulose science and technology is the discovery of cellulose nano crystals (CNC) from natural cellulose sources. CNC is made from cellulose which is a natural polymer of wide abundance and is an almost non-exhausting source. These nanofibrils under particular concentration can form ordered structures leading to lyotropic liquid crystals. It was noticed that rod like CNC can form a stable chiral nematic liquid crystalline phase. The chiral nematic (cholesteric) phase thus formed is characterized by long-range orientational order of the nanorods combined with a helical modulation of the direction in which they align. The intriguing ability of CNCs to self-organize into a cholesteric liquid crystal phase with a helical arrangement has attracted significant interest, as this arrangement gives dried CNC films a photonic band gap. Thus formed film has attractive optical properties, creating possibilities for use in applications such as security papers and mirrorless lasing. Controlling and understanding the mechanisms of liquid crystalline self-assembly of LCPs are not only of fundamental importance but are steps along the route to produce novel materials with desirable optical or mechanical properties. Nanostructured films with a photonic band gap phase of CNC suspensions arising from the spontaneous helix formation in the cholesteric liquid crystal have been the focus of several studies. The use of CNC suspension as a self-assembled template for the synthesis of inorganic materials offers a promising and versatile platform to fabricate multifunctional mesoporous materials with photonic crystal properties of very large surface areas. The combination of CNC and inorganic materials with higher refractive indices may lead towards photonic devices such as tunable mirrorless lasers, and CNC-templated materials with specific surface functionalities may pave way for the development of enantioselective sensors.
Composites Part A-applied Science and Manufacturing | 2012
Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph; Sabu Thomas; R. Muraleekrishnan
Polymer Composites | 2011
Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph; Abderrahim Boudenne; S. Thomas
Journal of Applied Polymer Science | 2011
Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph; Sabu Thomas; R. Muraleekrishnan
Polymer Composites | 2015
Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph
Polymer Composites | 2016
Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph
Polymer Composites | 2018
Gejo George; Kuruvilla Joseph; Appukuttan Saritha; E.R. Nagarajan
Polymer Composites | 2018
Jitha S Jayan; Appukuttan Saritha; Kuruvilla Joseph
Materials Today: Proceedings | 2018
Krishna S Nair; Appukuttan Saritha; Jitha S Jayan; S. Geethu; J. Neeraja; Lekshmi V. Pillai; Gayathri S. Dilip; Gopika Venu; Kuruvilla Joseph