2008 APS March Meeting
Volume 53, Number 2
Monday–Friday, March 10–14, 2008;
New Orleans, Louisiana
Session V1: Recent Advances in Soft Complex Materials Using Neutron Scattering
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Thursday, March 13, 2008
Morial Convention Center
Room: LaLouisiane AB
Sponsoring
Unit:
DMP
Chair: Alan J. Hurd, Los Alamos National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.MAR.V1.5
Abstract: V1.00005 : Phase Behavior of Block Copolymer/Inorganic Nanoparticle Composites
1:39 PM–2:15 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Pappannan Thiyagarajan
(Argonne National Laboratory)
Block copolymers offer as versatile platforms for the
fabrication of hybrid nanocomposites with ordered phases useful
for various nanotechnology applications. Although the phase
behavior of block copolymers is well established the effects of
inorganic nanoparticle loading on their phase behavior are not
well understood. We carried out a systematic study on the phase
behavior of block copolymers with well dispersed nanoparticles.
To achieve excellent dispersion of nanoparticles in the polymer
phase we used grafted nanoparticles with small polymer chains
compatible to a preferred domain of the block copolymer. The
nanoparticles sequestered in a preferred domain have profound
effects on the thermodynamically induced microphase separation
of the block copolymers. To characterize the phase behavior of
these systems in a selective solvent we used small angle neutron
scattering and that in their bulk and thin film architectures
was studied using synchrotron based small angle x-ray scattering
and grazing incidence small angle scattering techniques. A
number of molecular properties such as the molecular weight of
the polymer, segment volume fraction, Flory-Huggins $\chi$ parameter
and the nanoparticle concentration influence the state of
dispersion of nanoparticles and the nanocomposite morphology in
bulk and thin film architectures. The addition of homopolymers
provides as yet another variable to alter the interfacial
tension and to slow the order-disorder transition. We also
probed the nanoscale dynamics at the polymer/nanoparticle
interfaces in these systems by using x-ray photon correlation
spectroscopy. The dynamics of nanoparticles in the composites is
strongly dependent on the dimensionality of the morphology of
the block copolymer. Furthermore, the interfacial interaction at
the polymer/particle interface plays significant role in the
stress relaxation in the composites.
\newline
\newline
$^1$This work was done in collaboration with Chieh-Tsung Lo, Byeongdu
Lee, Randall E. Winans, Alec Sandy, XSD Division, Advanced Photon
Source and Vilas Pol, David Bohnsack, IPNS, Argonne National
Laboratory.
\newline
$^2$Work benefited from the use of facilities at Argonne National
Laboratory funded by DOE, BES under contract DE-AC02-06CH11357 to
the UChicago Argonne, LLC.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.MAR.V1.5