Mechanical Properties
of Thin Glassy Polymer Films
Filled with Spherical Polymer-Grafted Nanoparticles
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Abstract
It is commonly accepted that the addition of spherical
nanoparticles
(NPs) cannot simultaneously improve the elastic modulus, the yield
stress, and the ductility of an amorphous glassy polymer matrix. In
contrast to this conventional wisdom, we show that ductility can be
substantially increased, while maintaining gains in the elastic modulus
and yield stress, in glassy nanocomposite films composed of spherical
silica NPs grafted with polystyrene (PS) chains in a PS matrix. The
key to these improvements are (i) uniform NP spatial dispersion and
(ii) strong interfacial binding between NPs and the matrix, by making
the grafted chains sufficiently long relative to the matrix. Strikingly,
the optimal conditions for the mechanical reinforcement of the same
nanocomposite material in the melt state is completely different,
requiring the presence of spatially extended NP clusters. Evidently,
NP spatial dispersions that optimize material properties are crucially
sensitive to the state (melt versus glass) of the polymeric material