Nanoconfinement Effects on the Glass Transition

Nanoconfinement Effects on the Glass Transition
Author :
Publisher :
Total Pages : 46
Release :
ISBN-10 : OCLC:1263703178
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (78 Downloads)

Book Synopsis Nanoconfinement Effects on the Glass Transition by : Ryan Lang

Download or read book Nanoconfinement Effects on the Glass Transition written by Ryan Lang and published by . This book was released on 2013 with total page 46 pages. Available in PDF, EPUB and Kindle. Book excerpt: As the use of materials with nanoscale features becomes more common, the development of a full understanding of the effects of confinement at this length scale has become increasingly necessary. Nanoconfinement effects have been shown to impact engineering properties such as elastic modulus, diffusivity and the glass transition temperature. Unlike thermodynamic interface effects, which typically decay on a length scale of nanometers or less, dynamic confinement effects can dominate the behavior of films approaching 100 nm in thickness. Strong observed dependences of glass transition nanoconfinement effects on interfacial properties, such as modulus of the confining material and the interfacial energy, suggest that these effects emerge in large part from an interface effect rather than a finite-size effect. Despite substantial effort in this area, many questions have not been fully answered; notably, what drives the range of these effects, and what types of effects on the glass transition behavior should be expected given a certain class of confinement. This study employs molecular dynamics simulations of a model nanolayered polymer, and freestanding film, to systematically evaluate a wide range of confinement types that vary in both `softness' and interfacial energy. Results of these systems suggest the existence of three classes of confinement: smooth, soft, and hard, with these classifications depending on both the softness of confinement and interfacial energy. Results also demonstrate that the size of the length scale of dynamic effects for systems under smooth and soft confinement is in qualitative agreement with the size scale of cooperatively rearranging regions, while systems under hard confinement exhibit no such behavior and a much shorter length scale over which these effects propagate. The results shown here should prove valuable in the continued study and engineering of nanoscale materials including thin films, block copolymer systems, and nanoparticle systems.


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