Issue 11, 2011

Impact of in situpolymer coating on particle dispersion into solid laser-generated nanocomposites

Abstract

The crucial step in the production of solid nanocomposites is the uniform embedding of nanoparticles into the polymer matrix, since the colloidal properties or specific physical properties are very sensitive to particle dispersion within the nanocomposite. Therefore, we studied a laser-based generation method of a nanocomposite which enables us to control the agglomeration of nanoparticles and to increase the single particle dispersion within polyurethane. For this purpose, we ablated targets of silver and copper inside a polymer-doped solution of tetrahydrofuran by a picosecond laser (using a pulse energy of 125 μJ at 33.3 kHz repetition rate) and hardened the resulting colloids into solid polymers. Electron microscopy of these nanocomposites revealed that primary particle size, agglomerate size and particle dispersion strongly depend on concentration of the polyurethane added before laser ablation. 0.3 wt% polyurethane is the optimal polymer concentration to produce nanocomposites with improved particle dispersion and adequate productivity. Lower polyurethane concentration results in agglomeration whereas higher concentration reduces the production rate significantly. The following evaporation step did not change the distribution of the nanocomposite inside the polyurethane matrix. Hence, the in situ coating of nanoparticles with polyurethane during laser ablation enables simple integration into the structural analogue polymer matrix without additives. Furthermore, it was possible to injection mold these in situ-stabilized nanocomposites without affecting particle dispersion. This clarifies that sufficient in situ stabilization during laser ablation in polymer solution is able to prevent agglomeration even in a hot polymer melt.

Graphical abstract: Impact of in situpolymer coating on particle dispersion into solid laser-generated nanocomposites

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
25 Oct 2010
Accepted
11 Jan 2011
First published
04 Feb 2011

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011,13, 5120-5126

Impact of in situpolymer coating on particle dispersion into solid laser-generated nanocomposites

P. Wagener, G. Brandes, A. Schwenke and S. Barcikowski, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2011, 13, 5120 DOI: 10.1039/C0CP02262D

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