Micrometer Mobile Surface Layer in a Glassy Polymer
ORAL
Abstract
It is well established that the near-surface dynamics of glassy polymers are enhanced relative to the bulk. However, the distance propagated by these dynamics, ht, is still unsettled. In this study, we measured the mechanical relaxations of free-standing polystyrene films with thickneeses, h, from 5 nm to 186 μm. For h < ~1 μm, the films relaxed faster than the bulk. And the relaxation time decreased with decreasing h below ~100 nm, consistent with the enhanced dynamics originating from a near-surface nanolayer. For h > 1 μm, a bulklike relaxation mode emerged, while the fast mode changed to one that stretched over ~1 μm from the free surface. These findings evidence that the mobile surface region is inhomogeneous, comprising a nanoscale outerlayer and a slower microscale sublayer that relax by different mechanisms. Consequently, measurements probing the enhanced dynamics of different mechanisms may find vastley different values of ht, as shown by the literature.
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Publication: "Microscale Mobile Surface Double Layer in a Glassy Polymer", H. Yuan, J. Yan, P. Gao, S. Kumar, O. K. C. Tsui*, Science Advances (accepted).
Presenters
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Ophelia K Tsui
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
Authors
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Ophelia K Tsui
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Hailin Yuan
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Jinsong Yan
Hong Kong University of Science and Tech
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Ping Gao
Hong Kong University of Science and Technology
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Sanat K Kumar
Columbia University