Spherulite Growth in Polymer-Nanoparticle Blends
ORAL
Abstract
Blends of polymers with inorganic nanoparticles (NP) were studied by polarized optical and fluorescence microscopy. Silica nanoparticles with a range of diameters from 7 to 100 nm were used. Neat NPs as well as NPs surface-functionalized with a range of groups from strongly to weakly interacting, were blended with poly(ethylene oxide). A purpose-built T-jump microscopy cell was used allowing rapid temperature equilibration at high supercoolings. Lautitzen-Hoffman type analysis revealed that, although the NPs slow down the standard growth rate $G_0 $in the order PEO - Me-treated SiO2 - untreated SiO2 - COOH-treated SiO2 - NH2-treated SiO2, the surface free energy $\sigma $ decreases in the same order. This suggests that the NPs reduce macromolecular mobility, but at the same time help reduce the secondary nucleation barrier to some extent. Other polymers and NP types, including quantum dots, were also studied. The work also examines the spatial distribution of NPs in the spherulitic polymer nanocomposites.
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Authors
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Goran Ungar
Seoul National University and University of Sheffield, Dept. Materials Sci. Eng., University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
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Eunwoo Lee
Seoul National University
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Ruibin Zhang
University of Sheffield
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Jyongsik Jang
Seoul National University