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Tuning Physicochemical Properties of Polymers through Extreme Nanoconfinement

ORAL

Abstract

Extreme nanoconfinement of a polymer can be achieved by infiltrating a polymer into a highly-loaded nanoparticle (NP) film via Capillary Rise Infiltration (CaRI). Here, we explore the properties of polymers in CaRI films with various strengths of interfacial interactions. Polyethersulfone (PES), poly (2-vinylpyridine) (P2VP), or polystyrene (PS) are infiltrated into SiO2 NPs. Physicochemical properties of these polymers are tuned under various confinement conditions using NPs with various sizes (3−30 nm average pore sizes) and various degrees of NP sintering prior to infiltration. Extreme enhancement of the glass transition temperature (Tg) is observed with Tg increases as high as 106K above bulk Tg for the 11nm sintered NP packings infiltrated by PES. In this case both entropic and enthalpic effects contribute to Tg enhancement. Nanoconfinement leads to substantial improvement in thermal stability of polymers. Upon heating at elevated temperatures, polymers with less char residues are more resistant to degradation.

Presenters

  • Ahmad Arabi Shams Abadi

    University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Ahmad Arabi Shams Abadi

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Haonan Wang

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Yueli Chen

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Ayda Rafie

    Drexel University

  • Mykola Seredych

    Drexel University

  • Vibha Kalra

    Drexel University

  • Zahra Fakhraai

    University of Pennsylvania, Department of Chemistry, University of Pennsylvania