2005 APS March Meeting
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2005;
Los Angeles, CA
Session B4: Glassy Polymers
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Monday, March 21, 2005
LACC
Room: 515A
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: Alexei Sokolov, University of Akron
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.MAR.B4.1
Abstract: B4.00001 : The Distributions of Tg Values and Physical Aging across Thin and Ultrathin Polymer Films and within Polymer Nanocomposites
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
John M. Torkelson
(Northwestern University, Evanston, IL 60208-3120)
Polymeric glass
formers can exhibit amazing changes in glass transition
temperature, Tg,
relative to bulk when subject to nanoconfinement. At present
there is no
detailed understanding of this effect nor, until recently, was
there a
method to determine how far from the surface or interface these
effects
propagate into the glass former. We have developed a simple,
fluorescence /
multilayer method that has yielded the first determination of
the
distribution of Tg values across supported polymer films,
revealing that the
enhancement of dynamics at a surface affects Tg several tens of
nanometers
into a polystyrene (PS) film. The extent to which Tg dynamics
smoothly
transition from enhanced to bulk states depends strongly on
nanoconfinement.
When films are sufficiently thin that a reduction in thickness
leads to an
overall Tg reduction, the surface-layer Tg actually increases
with a
reduction in overall thickness whereas the substrate-layer Tg
decreases.
These results indicate that the gradient in Tg dynamics is not
abrupt and
that the size of a cooperatively rearranging region is much
smaller than the
distance over which interfacial effects propagate. There is no
MW dependence
of the Tg-nanoconfinement effect in PS; thus, the effect cannot
be
attributed to radius of gyration, segregation of chains ends to
the free
surface, or entanglement reduction. However, the effect is
strongly
dependent on added diluent, repeat unit structure and
attractive
polymer-substrate interactions: added diluent reduces or even
suppresses the
effect; poly(4-tert-butylstyrene) exhibits a Tg reduction at a
thickness of
300-400 nm, far beyond the thickness at which Tg reductions are
observed in
PS; and poly(2-vinyl pyridine) (P2VP), which can undergo
hydrogen-bonding
with hydroxyl units on the surface of glass, exhibits
enhancements in Tg at
thicknesses below 300 nm. We have also developed an approach
for
characterizing physical aging in thin and ultrathin films,
revealing that
the distribution of physical aging is distinct from that of Tg.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.MAR.B4.1