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A New Direction of Polymer Nanocomposite: Polymer Infiltrated Scaffold Metals

POSTER

Abstract

Polymer composites have been widely studied because of their outstanding properties. Typically, polymer nanocomposites (PNC) are fabricated by adding inorganic nanofillers to a polymer matrix. In this work, a high-filler PNC is created by infiltrating polystyrene (PS) or poly(2-vinylpyridine) (P2VP) into a nanoporous gold scaffold exhibiting a bicontinuous structure and nanoscale pores. Infiltration occurs through capillary forces by heating PS (P2VP) above its glass transition temperature. PS and P2VP, having different affinities to the gold scaffold, exhibit different segmental dynamics inside the confined pores as measured through Tg. The more attractive P2VP shows a 20°C increase in Tg while PS shows only a 6°C increase at a comparable molecular weight. The effect of molecular weight on infiltration kinetics is presented with P2VP exhibiting longer infiltration time compared to PS having a similar molecular weight. The interconnected structure of these composites could facilitate high ion (electron) conductivity, thus enabling enhanced performance for batteries and flexible electronics.

Publication: Maguire, S. M., Bilchak, C. R., Corsi, J. S., Welborn, S. S., Tsaggaris, T., Ford, J., Detsi, E., Fakhraai, Z., & Composto, R. J. (2021). Effect of nanoscale confinement on polymer-infiltrated scaffold metal composites. ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces, 13(37), 44893–44903.

Presenters

  • Weiwei Kong

    University of Pennsylvania

Authors

  • Weiwei Kong

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Yueli Chen

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Shawn M Maguire

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Connor Bilchak

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Jamie Ford

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Alexander Ng

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Eric Detsi

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Zahra Fakhraai

    University of Pennsylvania

  • Russell J Composto

    University of Pennsylvania