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Journal ArticleDOI

Interface and chain confinement effects on the glass transition temperature of thin polymer films

James A. Forrest, +2 more
- 01 Nov 1997 - 
- Vol. 56, Iss: 5, pp 5705-5716
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TLDR
In this paper, Brillouin light scattering and ellipsometry were used to measure the glass transition temperature of thin polystyrene (PS) films as a function of the film thickness for two different molecular weights.
Abstract
We have used Brillouin light scattering and ellipsometry to measure the glass transition temperature ${T}_{g}$ of thin polystyrene (PS) films as a function of the film thickness $h$ for two different molecular weights ${M}_{w}.$ Three different film geometries were studied: freely standing films, films supported on a ${\mathrm{SiO}}_{x}$ surface with the other film surface free (uncapped supported), and films supported on a ${\mathrm{SiO}}_{x}$ surface and covered with a ${\mathrm{SiO}}_{x}$ layer (capped supported). For freely standing films ${T}_{g}$ is reduced dramatically from the bulk value by an amount that depends on both $h$ and ${M}_{w}.$ For $h\ensuremath{\lesssim}{R}_{\mathrm{EE}}$ (the average end-to-end distance of the unperturbed polymer molecules), ${T}_{g}$ decreases linearly with decreasing $h$ with reductions as large as 60 K for both ${M}_{w}$ values. We observe a large ${M}_{w}$ dependence of the ${T}_{g}$ reductions for freely standing films which provides the first strong evidence of the importance of chain confinement effects on the glass transition temperature of thin polymer films. For both the uncapped and capped supported films, ${T}_{g}$ is reduced only slightly $(l10\mathrm{K})$ from the bulk value, with only small differences in ${T}_{g}$ $(l4\mathrm{K})$ observed between uncapped and capped supported films of the same thickness. The results of our experiments demonstrate that the polymer-substrate interaction is the dominant effect in determining the glass transition temperature of PS films supported on ${\mathrm{SiO}}_{x}.$

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Citations
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Effects of confinement on material behaviour at the nanometre size scale

TL;DR: In this article, the effects of size and confinement at the nanometre size scale on both the melting temperature and the glass transition temperature, Tm, are reviewed, and it seems that the existing theories of Tg are unable to explain the range of behaviours seen at the nano-scale.
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Highly stretchable polymer semiconductor films through the nanoconfinement effect

TL;DR: The increased polymer chain dynamics under nanoconfinement significantly reduces the modulus of the conjugated polymer and largely delays the onset of crack formation under strain, and the fabricated semiconducting film can be stretched up to 100% strain without affecting mobility, retaining values comparable to that of amorphous silicon.
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The glass transition in thin polymer films

TL;DR: In this article, a detailed account of important recent developments in the rapidly evolving area of glass transitions in thin polymer films is presented. But the case of polymer films supported by substrates, and a definite experimental consensus exists.
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Quantitative equivalence between polymer nanocomposites and thin polymer films

TL;DR: The thermomechanical properties of ‘polymer nanocomposites’ are quantitatively equivalent to the well-documented case of planar polymer films and it is conjecture that the glass-transition process requires that the interphase regions surrounding different particles interact.
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Global changes in intensity of the Earth's magnetic field during the past 800kyr

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the integration of 33 records of relative palaeointensity into a composite curve spanning the past 800 kyr and find that the intensity of the Earth's dipole field has experienced large-amplitude variations over this time period with pronounced intensity minima coinciding with known excursions in field direction, reflecting the emergence of non-dipole components.
References
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Book

Polymers: Chemistry and Physics of Modern Materials

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe step-growth polymerization reactions initiated by metal catalysts and transfer reactions, as well as the properties of the Amorphous State, the Elastomeric State and the Crystalline State.
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