1 research outputs found
Hierarchical Structure and Crystal Orientation in Poly(ethylene oxide)/Clay Nanocomposite Films
Water-cast nanocomposite films formed
by polyÂ(ethylene oxide) (PEO)
and Laponite clay were found to display three characteristic levels
of structure with large-scale orientation. The first level with the
length scale of ca. 30–50 nm was the clay lamellar bundles,
which tended to stack perpendicularly to the film surface. The second
level with the characteristic length of 1.8 nm was associated with
the alternating stacking of the silicate layers and the PEO chains
sandwiched between them. The preferred orientations of these two levels
of structure were independent of clay content, solvent removal rate
for the film preparation, and the crystallization temperature of the
PEO chains situating outside the clay bundles. The third level of
structure was characterized by the preferred orientation of the PEO
crystalline stems with respect to the surface of the silicate layers.
Perpendicular orientation always dominated in the nanocomposite films
prepared by slow solvent removal irrespective of crystallization temperature.
In the films prepared by fast solvent removal, however, parallel crystal
orientation set in as the clay concentration exceeded ca. 33 wt %.
The preferred crystal orientation was ascribed to the confinement
effect imposed by the clay bundles to the crystallization of the PEO
chains situating in the interbundle region. In the films cast by slow
solvent removal, the weaker confinement associated with the larger
interbundle distance led to perpendicular crystal orientation. When
the interbundle distance was reduced to ca. 30 nm in the films prepared
by rapid solvent evaporation, the strong confinement directed the
crystals to form parallel orientation