This research effort investigated the influence of confinement on the physical aging behavior of thin and ultrathin glassy polymer membranes. Membrane permeability
changes with time due to physical aging, and for reasons not completely understood, the rate of permeability change can become orders of magnitude faster in films thinner than one micron. Special experimental techniques were developed to enable the study of free standing, ultrathin glassy polymer films using gas permeability measurements. The gas
transport properties and physical aging behavior of free-standing glassy polysulfone (PSF) and Matrimid® films from 18-550 nm thick are presented. Physical aging persists in glassy films approaching the length scale of individual polymer coils. The membranes exhibited significant reductions in gas permeability and increases in selectivity with
aging time. Additionally, the influence of physical aging on the free volume profile in thin
PSF films was investigated using variable energy positron annihilation lifetimespectroscopy (PALS). The films exhibited decreasing o-Ps lifetime during physical aging, while o-Ps intensity remained constant. The o-Ps lifetime was reduced at lower
implantation energies, indicating smaller free volume elements near the film surface. Thin films aged dramatically faster than bulk PSF and the PALS results agree favorably to behavior tracked by gas permeability measurements.
The physical aging behavior of ultrathin films with different previous histories was also studied. The state of these materials was modulated by various conditioning treatments. Regardless of the previous history, the nature of the aging response was consistent with the aging behavior of an untreated film that was freshly quenched from
above Tg, i.e., permeability decreased and pure gas selectivity increased with aging time.
However, the extent of aging-induced changes in transport properties of these materials
depended strongly on previous history. The properties of these ultrathin films deviate dramatically from bulk behavior,
and the nature of these deviations is consistent with enhanced mobility and reduced Tg in
ultrathin films, which allows them to reach a lower free volume state more quickly than bulk material. The Struik physical aging model was extended to account for the
influence of film thickness on aging, and was shown to accurately describe the experimental data. / text
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:UTEXAS/oai:repositories.lib.utexas.edu:2152/ETD-UT-2010-05-930 |
Date | 07 January 2011 |
Creators | Rowe, Brandon William |
Source Sets | University of Texas |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | thesis |
Format | application/pdf |
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