4.6 Article

Effects of Low-Frequency Randomly Polarized Electromagnetic Radiation, as Revealed upon Swelling of Polymer Membrane in Water with Different Isotopic Compositions

Journal

MATERIALS
Volume 16, Issue 13, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ma16134622

Keywords

polymer membrane; photoluminescence spectroscopy; low-frequency electromagnetic radiation; isotropic submicron-sized particles; anisotropic submicron-sized particles; luminescence quenching

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Photoluminescence from the surface of Nafion polymer membrane upon swelling in water under irradiation by electromagnetic waves at a frequency of 100 MHz was investigated. The effects of natural deionized (DI) water and deuterium-depleted water (DDW) with different deuterium content were studied. The influence of linearly and randomly polarized low-frequency electromagnetic radiation on luminescence excitation was examined for the first time. Anisotropic submicron-sized particles were used to obtain low-frequency electromagnetic radiation with random polarizations.
Photoluminescence from the surface of Nafion polymer membrane upon swelling in water under irradiation by electromagnetic waves at a frequency of 100 MHz was studied. In these experiments, natural deionized (DI) water with a deuterium content of 157 ppm and deuterium-depleted water (DDW, deuterium content is 1 ppm) were explored. We have studied for the first time the effect of linearly and randomly polarized low-frequency electromagnetic radiation on the luminescence excitation. To obtain low-frequency electromagnetic radiation with random polarizations, anisotropic solid submicron-sized particles, which result in depolarization effects upon scattering of the initially linearly polarized radiation, were used. We compared two types of colloidal particles: spherically symmetric (isotropic) and elongated (anisotropic). If the radiation is linearly polarized, the intensity of luminescence from the Nafion surface decreases exponentially as the polymer is soaked, and such a behavior is observed both in natural DI water and DDW. When spherically symmetric submicron-sized particles are added to a liquid sample, the luminescence intensity also decreases exponentially upon swelling in both natural DI water and DDW. At the same time, when anisotropic submicron-sized particles are added to DI water, random jumps in the luminescence intensity appear during swelling. At the same time, the exponential decrease in the luminescence intensity is retained upon swelling in DDW. A qualitative theoretical model for the occurrence of random jumps in the luminescence intensity is presented.

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