화학공학소재연구정보센터
Macromolecules, Vol.38, No.6, 2271-2280, 2005
Controlled foaming of polymer films through restricted surface diffusion and the addition of nanosilica particles or CO2-philic surfactants
Synergistic use of surface barriers and nanoscale additives is investigated as alternate means by which to promote bubble nucleation in, and thus improve the porosity of, poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) thin films (i) constrained between impenetrable plates, (ii) modified with either nanosilica particles, commercial short-chain fluorosurfactants, or designer CO2-philic block/graft copolymers, and (iii) exposed to high-pressure CO2. Resultant foamed films exhibit a vast array of micro/mesocellular morphologies in the presence of supercritical, as well as liquid, CO2 and demonstrate that copolymer micelles afford better control over bubble nucleation (with pore cell densities, N, approaching 10(12) cells/ cm 3) relative to hard nonporous nanoparticles, which alone increase N by more than 2 orders of magnitude at low CO2 pressures. Incorporation of these nanoscale additives in a surface-constrained polymer matrix serves to enhance foaming through concurrent restriction Of CO2 diffusion, heterogeneous nucleation of CO2 bubbles, and/or reduced interfacial tension between PMMA and CO2.