2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session J4: Polymer-based Composite Materials
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Tuesday, March 6, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: Korbel 2B-3B
Sponsoring
Units:
DPOLY FIAP
Chair: Karen Winey, University of Pennsylvania
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.J4.4
Abstract: J4.00004 : Aggregation,Steric Stabilization,Bridging and Miscibility of Polymer Nanocomposites
1:03 PM–1:39 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Kenneth Schweizer
(University of Illinois)
Microscopic liquid state theory has been employed to study the potential of mean
force (PMF), statistical structure, and phase separation of spherical nanoparticles in
a dense polymer melt over a wide range of interfacial chemistry, chain length, and
filler size and volume fraction conditions. As interfacial cohesion strength increases
the nanoparticle organization evolves from contact depletion aggregation, to well
dispersed behavior associated with a thermodynamically stable polymer coating, to
polymer-mediated bridging of a variable degree of tightness. Near linear scaling of
the PMF with the particle/monomer diameter ratio is found, and the spatial range of
the interfacial attraction is important in determining nanoparticle organization.
Spinodal demixing calculations predict an entropy-driven fluid-fluid phase
separation for weak interfacial attractions, and an enthalpically driven network or
complex formation type of phase separation in the strong cohesion regime. A
miscibility window exists at intermediate interfacial attraction strengths which
systematically narrows, and is ultimately destroyed, as particle size and/or direct
filler-filler van der Waals attractions increase. The length-scale dependent real
space statistical structure is quantified via calculations of the polymer and filler
intermolecular pair correlation functions and partial scattering structure factors. At
high filler volume fractions interference between the polymer organization near
nanoparticle surfaces induces significant changes of filler packing. The presence of
bound polymer layers in miscible nanocomposites results in microphase-
separation-like features in the small angle collective polymer structure factor.
Implications of the theoretical results for the design of thermodynamically and/or
kinetically well-dispersed polymer nanocomposites, and the formation of
nonequilibrium networks, will be discussed. The theory has also been generalized to
treat the consequences of soft intermolecular repulsions, and nonspherical fillers
including rod, disk and compact molecule-like shapes.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.J4.4