317 research outputs found

    Reduced-mobility layers with high internal mobility in poly(ethylene oxide)-silica nanocomposites

    Get PDF
    © 2017 Author(s). A series of poly(ethylene oxide) nanocomposites with spherical silica was studied by proton NMR spectroscopy, identifying and characterizing reduced-mobility components arising from either room-temperature lateral adsorption or possibly end-group mediated high-temperature bonding to the silica surface. The study complements earlier neutron-scattering results for some of the samples. The estimated thickness of a layer characterized by significant internal mobility resembling backbone rotation ranges from 2 nm for longer (20 k) chains adsorbed on 42 nm diameter particles to 0.5 nm and below for shorter (2 k) chains on 13 nm particles. In the latter case, even lower adsorbed amounts are found when hydroxy endgroups are replaced by methyl endgroups. Both heating and water addition do not lead to significant changes of the observables, in contrast to other systems such as acrylate polymers adsorbed to silica, where temperature- and solvent-induced softening associated with a glass transition temperature gradient was evidenced. We highlight the actual agreement and complementarity of NMR and neutron scattering results, with the earlier ambiguities mainly arising from different sensitivities to the component fractions and the details of their mobility

    Effect of junction aggregation on the dynamics of supramolecular polymers and networks

    Get PDF
    Transient structures based on associative polymers can deliver complex functions; as such, they hold promise for advanced applications as in drug delivery, tissue engineering, and electronics. The network structure and timescale of its rearrangement are key factors that define their range of utility. However, the inevitable phase separation of polar pairwise associations from nonpolar polymer chains frequently causes junction aggregation, whose stability and functionality significantly affect the network structure and dynamics, and as such, redefine its utility. Engineering the extent of association is a necessity for controlling properties of supramolecular materials, yet the current knowledge of the effect of design parameters on specificities of aggregates and their consequent effects on material properties is limited. To address this gap, the importance of aggregation is highlighted, the available theories and models of the dynamics of associative polymers in the presence of aggregates are reviewed, and the existing experimental records to draw a general guideline for interpreting the effect of aggregates on polymer dynamics are classified. Moreover, pitfalls and considerations like the applicability of time–temperature superposition, and the interplay of kinetics and thermodynamics of aggregation that may undermine the authenticity of the reported data are reviewed

    Structure of Thermoreversible Poly(vinyl alcohol) Cryo-Hydrogels as studied by Proton Low Field NMR Spectroscopy

    Get PDF
    The network structure of Poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVA) hydrogels obtained by freezing-thawing cycles was investigated by solid state 1H low field NMR spectroscopy. By application of multiple-quantum NMR experiments, we obtain information about the segmental order parameter, which is directly related to the restrictions to chain motion (crosslinks) formed upon gelation. These measurements indicate that the network mesh size, as well as the relative amount of non-elastic defects (i.e. non-crosslinked chains, dangling chains, loops) decreases with the number of freezing-thawing cycles, but it is independent of the polymer concentration. The formation of the PVA network is accompanied by an increasing fraction of polymer with fast magnetization decay (∼20μs). The quantitative study of this rigid phase with a specific refocusing pulse sequence shows that it is composed of a primary crystalline polymer phase (around 5%), which constitutes the main support of the network structure and determines the mesh size, and a secondary population of more imperfect crystallites, which increase the number of elastic chain segments in the polymer gel but does not affect the average network mesh size appreciably. Correspondingly, progressive melting of the secondary crystallites with increasing temperature does not affect the network mesh size but only the amount of network defects, and melting of the main PVA crystallites at around 80 ºC leads to destruction of the network gel and formation of an isotropic PVA solution.Peer reviewe

    Depercolation of aggregates upon polymer grafting in simplified industrial nanocomposites studied with dielectric spectroscopy

    Get PDF
    The dynamics of polymer and filler in simplified industrial silica-styrene-butadiene nanocomposites (silica Zeosil 1165 MP, volume fraction 0-21%v) have been studied with broadband dielectric spectroscopy (BDS) and nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). The fraction of graftable matrix chains was varied from 0 to 100%D3. The introduction of silica nanoparticles is shown to leave the segmental relaxation unaffected, an observation confirmed by the measurement of only a thin (some Angstroms thick) immobilized layer by NMR. The low-frequency measurements are resolved in two distinct dielectric Maxwell-Wagner-Sillars (MWS) processes of different behavior with respect to changes of large-scale silica structures induced by variations of filler fraction and grafting. It is found that increasing grafting leaves the first MWS-process unaffected, while it decreases the strength of the (slower) second MWS by about a decade. At constant silica volume fraction, this indicates depercolation of the filler, thereby providing a microscopic explanation of the evolution of rheological reinforcement. The sensitivity to large-scale reorganizations together with a characterization of local polymer dynamics provides insight over many length- and time-scales into structure and dynamics of nanocomposites, and thus the physical origin of the reinforcement effect.We are thankful for a “Chercheur d'Avenir” grant by the Languedoc-Roussillon region (J.O.) and Ph.D. funding “CIFRE” by Michelin (G.P.B.). The authors acknowledge financial support from the European Commission under the Seventh Framework Program by means of the grant agreement for the Integrated Infrastructure Initiative N. 262348 European Soft Matter Infrastructure (ESMI).Peer Reviewe

    The Influence of Chemical Modification on Linker Rotational Dynamics in Metal–Organic Frameworks

    Full text link
    The robust synthetic flexibility of metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) offers a promising class of tailorable materials, for which the ability to tune specific physicochemical properties is highly desired. This is achievable only through a thorough description of the consequences for chemical manipulations both in structure and dynamics. Magic angle spinning solid‐state NMR spectroscopy offers many modalities in this pursuit, particularly for dynamic studies. Herein, we employ a separated‐local‐field NMR approach to show how specific intraframework chemical modifications to MOF UiO‐66 heavily modulate the dynamic evolution of the organic ring moiety over several orders of magnitude.Intraframework ring rotations in metal–organic frameworks have been sensitively detected by dipolar dephasing over the rotor period in magic angle spinning solid‐state NMR experiments. Information on the dynamics within MOFs is important, because the rate of rotational motions of linkers affects sorption and separation properties of MOFs.Peer Reviewedhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144616/1/anie201805004.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144616/2/anie201805004-sup-0001-misc_information.pdfhttps://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/144616/3/anie201805004_am.pd

    Microscopic State of Polymer Network Chains upon Swelling and Deformation

    Get PDF
    We use low-resolution proton NMR to probe the chain deformation in swollen and nonlinearly deformed vulcanized rubber and end-linked PDMS networks on a microscopic level, extending earlier work focusing on uniaxial stretching and isotropic dilation upon swelling toward biaxial deformation and deformation of swollen samples. Previous studies have revealed that chain deformation in bulk samples is best described by tube models, and that chains in swollen samples deform affinely after an initial desinterspersion stage, upon which entanglement-related packing effects are relieved. We test whether a subsequent deformation may also be closer to affine, and find that this is not the case. Unexpectedly, nonisotropic deformation of swollen samples also follows tube-model predictions, which is explained by a dominance of structural inhomogeneities and significant reorganization of the topological constraints active in the swollen and possibly even the bulk state.Fil: Naumova, Anna. Martin Luther Universität Halle Wittenberg; AlemaniaFil: Agudelo Mora, Diana Carolina. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Planta Piloto de Ingeniería Química. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Planta Piloto de Ingeniería Química; ArgentinaFil: Villar, Marcelo Armando. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Planta Piloto de Ingeniería Química. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Planta Piloto de Ingeniería Química; Argentina. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Ingeniería Química; ArgentinaFil: Vega, Daniel Alberto. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas. Centro Científico Tecnológico Conicet - Bahía Blanca. Instituto de Física del Sur. Universidad Nacional del Sur. Departamento de Física. Instituto de Física del Sur; ArgentinaFil: Valentin, Juan Lopez. Instituto en Ciencia y Tecnología de Polímeros; España. Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas; EspañaFil: Saalwächter, Kay. Martin Luther Universität Halle Wittenberg; Alemani

    Uncertainties in the determination of cross-link density by equilibrium swelling experiments in natural rubber

    Get PDF
    ABSTRACT: Equilibrium swelling is a feasible and simple experiment to determine the cross-link density of networks. It is the most popular and useful approach; however, in most of the cases, the given values are highly uncertain if not erroneous. The description of the complex thermodynamics of swollen polymer networks is usually based on the Flory-Rehner model. However, experimental evidence has shown that both the mixing term described by the Flory-Huggins expression and the elastic component derived from the affine model are only approximations that fail in the description and prediction of the rubber network behavior. This means that the Flory-Rehner treatment can only give a qualitative evaluation of cross-link density because of its strong dependence on the thermodynamic model. In this work, the uncertainties in the determination of the cross-link density in rubber materials by swelling experiments based on this model are reviewed. The implications and the validity of some of the used approximations as well as their influence in the relationship of the cross-link densities derived from swelling experiments are discussed. Importantly, swelling results are compared with results of a completely independent determination of the cross-link density by proton multiple-quantum NMR, and the correlation observed between the two methods can help to validate the thermodynamic model
    corecore