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Structure And Dynamics Of Polymers In ConfinementSrivastava, Sunita 07 1900 (has links)
The thesis describes the study of structure and dynamics of polymers in confined geometry. We study the finite size effect on the dynamics of non glassy and glassy polymers. Systematic measurement have been performed to address the issue of the possibility of entanglement and hence reptation dynamics of the polymer segments in confinement. The confinement effect on the glassy dynamics has been studied for Langmuir monolayers as well as for polymer nanoparticle hybrid systems. Slow and heterogeneous dynamics are the underlined observed behavior for dynamics in hybrid systems. The available theories explains the slowing down of the dynamics as the system is cooled from the liquid state in terms of increasing cooperative motion of the molecules. The size of the cooperative region is predicted to grow with reducing temperature. Experiments, theories and simulation in confined dimensions have been motivated to detect this length scale of the cooperatively rearranging region. The surface and interface effects on glass transition were studied using measurements based on modulated differential scanning calorimetry and small angle X ray scattering techniques. The dynamical heterogeneity in glassy polymers were studied using advanced X ray photon correlation spectroscopy techniques. Our studies presented in this thesis are also an small step to contribute to the existing experimental results on studying the surface, interface and finite size effects on the morphology and dynamics of confined systems. These effects were studied for, firstly ultra thin Langmuir monolayers and secondly polymer nanoparticle hybrid systems. In Chapter 1, we provide the theoretical background along with brief review of the literature for understanding the results presented in this thesis. The details of the experimental set up and their operating principle along with the details of the experimental conditions are provided in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3 we presents our experimental results on surface morphology and surface dynamics in ultra thin Langmuir monolayer of polymers. Chapter 4 and Chapter 5 discusses the result based on polymer nanoparticle hybrid systems. We provide the summary of our result and the future prospective of the work in Chapter 6. In appendix we have shown the complete derivation of the equation used in Chapter 3 for understanding the surface morphology of Langmuir monoalyers on water surface.
Chapter 1 provides in detail the introduction to several aspects related with the dynamics of both glassy and non glassy polymers in confinement. It starts with brief introduction to structure and dynamics of polymers in bulk. In the next section we discuss the macroscopic viscoelastic behavior of materials followed by a very brief discussion on the common techniques used for such measurement. Further it discusses the theory and several available models present in literature to understand the dynamics of glass transition. This section is followed by discussion on surface and interface effects on structure and dynamics of such systems in confinement. Towards the end of this chapter we discuss the universal behavior of slow dynamic observed in soft glassy materials.
Chapter 2 contains the details of the experimental techniques which has been used for the study. Brief introduction to basic principles of the measurements followed by details of the material and methods have been provided. The surface morphology and dynamics of Langmuir monolayer of polymers confined at air water interface, under compressive mechanical strain has been discussed in Chapter 3. The results presented for surface morphology are based on the studies using the combination of in situ grazing angle incidence small angle X ray scattering and ex situ atomic force microscopy measurements on monolayers transfered on silicon substrate. The issue of the presence of reptation motion in confinement has been addressed by performing systematic measurements as a function of surface concentration and molecular weight at fixed temperature. The glassy dynamical behavior has been studied on different glassy polymer layer as a function of surface concentration and temperature.
In Chapter 4 we show the glass transition behavior of polymer nanoparticle (PMMA gold) hybrid system based on thermal measurements. This chapter discusses the role of the existence of a length scale in deciding the dynamics of the glass transition temperature of polymers. The confinement effect was tuned by the variation of the inter particle spacing between the nanoparticles in the polymer matrix. It also discusses the model to understand the observed behavior of the glass transition temperature in terms of the tunability of the polymer particle interface and the effect of the interface morphology on the dynamics of glass transition temperature.
Chapter 5 is about the study of dynamics of polymer nanocomposites near glass transition as a function of temperature, wave vector and volume fraction of gold nanoparticles using X ray photon correlation spectroscopy. Based on our experimental results , we provide a phase diagram for dynamics in 2D space of temperature, wave vector and volume fraction for our PMMA gold nanoparticle hybrid samples.
Chapter 6 contains the summary and the future perspective of the work presented.
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Slow Dynamics In Complex Fluids : Confined Polymers And Soft ColloidsKandar, Ajoy Kumar 07 1900 (has links) (PDF)
The thesis describes the study of slow dynamics of confined polymers and
soft colloids. We study the finite size effect on the dynamics of glassy polymers
using newly developed interfacial microrheology technique. Systematic
measurement have been performed to address the issue of reduction of glass
transition under confinements. Slow and heterogeneous dynamics are the underlined observed behavior for dynamics in confined glassy polymers. The slow relaxation dynamics and dynamical heterogeneity in polymer grafted nanoparticles (PGNPs) systems were studied using advanced X - ray photon correlation spectroscopy (XPCS) techniques. Our studies presented in this thesis on dynamics of polymer grafted nanoparticle systems in melts and solution are the first attempt to study them experimentally. Thus our work shed the light about new technique to study confined system more accurately and explore new soft colloidal system to study fascinating dynamics and interesting phase behavior.
In Chapter 1, we provide the theoretical background along with brief review of the literature for understanding the results presented in this thesis. The details of the experimental set up and their operating principle along with the details of the experimental conditions are provided in Chapter 2. In Chapter 3 we present our newly developed technique (interfacial microrhelogy) and its consequences to study the complex fluids at interface. Chapter 4 discusses the concentration and temperature dependent glassy dynamics in confined glassy
polymers. In Chapter 5 we provide the structural and dynamical study of polymer
grafted nanoparticles in melts and solutions. We provide the summary of
our result and the future prospective of the work in Chapter 6.
Chapter-1 provides the ground work and theoretical aspects for understanding
the results presented in this thesis. It starts with the discussion about
the slow dynamics of complex fluids and transit to dynamic behavior of polymer
in confinement, glassy dynamics in confinements . This also discusses
the basic aspects of studying viscoelastic properties using rheology, interface
rheology, microrheology, interface microrheology techinques. In continuation it
discusses structure and dynamics of different soft colloids investigated for last decade and then theoretical aspects of XPCS is discussed. Towards the end
of this Chapter, we discuss the procedure to explain and understand systems
dynamical heterogeneity near glass like phase transition.
Chapter-2 contains the details of the experimental techniques which has been used for the study of confined polymers and soft colloids. Brief introduction to basic principles of the measurements followed by details of the material and
methods have been provided.
Chapter-3 we discuss the interafacial microrheology of different complex fluids and advantages of the techniques is discussed in Chapter 3. This includes
discussion about the technique sensitivity at the surface using quantum dots
(QDs) as a probe and about the configuration of the QDs at/on monolayer. Later
on establishment of the technique has been demonstrated through easurements on arachidic acid, poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA), poly(vinylacetate) (PVAc), poly(methylacrylate) (PMA) monolayers. The extracted subdiffusive nature of QDs in on monolayers through mean square displacement has been explained using fractional Brownian motion model. Towards the end of the chapter we discuss about the extraction of real and imaginary elastic modulus from mean square displacement data using generalized Stokes-Einstein relation for the quasi two dimensional systems and explains about the possible viscoelastic transition in the different monolayers.
The concentration and temperature dependent glassy dynamics of confined polymers (PMMA) are discussed in Chapter-4. We demonstrate the microscopic nature of spatio-temporal variation of dynamics of glassy polymers confined to a monolayer of 2 3 nm thickness as a function of surface density and temperature. It illustrates the systems dynamical heterogeneity and explain the observed large reduction of glass transition temperature in confined system through finite size effect.
In Chapter 5 we discuss the result based on systematic studies of dynamics of PGNPs in melts and solutions. In addition it also illustrates the structural anisotropy and anomalous dynamical transitions in binary mixture of PGNPs and homopolymers in good solvent condition. It provides temperature
and wave vector dependent XPCS measurements on polymer grafted nanoparticles with the variation of functionality. The functionality ( f ) dependent nonmonotonic relaxation in melts of PGNPs and solvent quality dependent non monotonic relaxation of PGNPs system have been elaborated in the continuation.
We present possible phase behavior of PGNPs system in good solvent with addition of homopolymer of two different molecular weight.
Chapter 6 contains the summary and the future perspective of the work presented.
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