Unexpected Thermal Annealing Effect on the Zero-shear Viscosity of Polymer Nanocomposites.

ORAL

Abstract

A comprehensive study was performed on the effect of thermal annealing above the glass transition temperature on the zero-shear viscosity, $\eta $, of polymer nanocomposites (PNCs) and their host polymers. For all the specimens studied, including neat and 4 wt{\%} DOP plasticized PS and PMMA as well as PNCs containing bare and grafted silica nanoparticles (NP, core radii, $r_{\mathrm{c}} \quad =$ 7 and 13.3 nm), $\eta $ initially increased with annealing time then approached a steady-state value after \textasciitilde 100 to \textasciitilde 200 h. We found that this phenomenon held true regardless of the solvent used to prepare the sample, including THF and toluene for PS and chloroform for PMMA. Moreover, the PNCs without DOP showed larger $\delta \eta $/$\eta $ than their host polymers while the plasticized ones showed $\delta \eta $/$\eta \quad \approx $ 0. By correlating the viscosity measurements with the evolution of the solvent content and average NP aggregate size in the samples, we infer that the viscosity evolutions may originate from an out-of-equilibrium chain conformation that got locked in the samples upon preparation and relaxed only after extensive annealing.

Authors

  • Fei Chen

    Department of Physics, Boston University, Boston University

  • Koshu Takatsuji

    Columbia University

  • Dan Zhao

    Columbia University

  • Xuanji Yu

    Materials Science and Engineering Division, Boston University, Boston University

  • Sanat Kumar

    Columbia University

  • Ophelia Tsui

    Boston University