4.7 Article

Long-Term Aging in Miscible Polymer Nanocomposites

Journal

MACROMOLECULES
Volume 55, Issue 11, Pages 4502-4515

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.2c00332

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [DGE-2036197]

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This study reveals that nanoparticles in a polymer matrix undergo structural reorganization during thermal annealing, resulting in changes in the structure and properties of polymer nanocomposites.
We find that the initial, solvent-cast state of nanoparticles (NPs) in a polymer matrix temporally evolves during thermal annealing such that, at steady state, NPs maximize their distance from each other subject to mass balance constraints. The observed timescales for this unexpected structural reorganization, as probed by small-angle X-ray scattering, are temperaturedependent and can be prohibitively large, especially at temperatures around and below 1.2Tg. X-ray photon correlation spectroscopy measurements during reorganization reveal that the collective NP dynamics slow down with annealing at constant temperature; this is accompanied by changes in the low-frequency regime in macroscopic viscoelastic measurements in equilibrated materials. By ruling out other potential sources for these effects (i.e., electrostatic interactions, adsorbed layers), we attribute these results to a long-ranged repulsive force between the NPs caused by fluctuations in the polymer phase, i.e., the anti-Casimir effect proposed by Obhukhov and Semenov [Long-range interactions in polymer melts: The anti-Casimir effect. Phys Rev Lett 2005, 95 (3), 038305]. Thus, our results highlight the important role of long-term, slow NP reorganization on the structure and, subsequently, the properties of polymer nanocomposites (PNCs), even in the case of nominally miscible polymer nanoparticle hybrids.

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