Issue 26, 2013

Diffusivities, viscosities, and conductivities of solvent-free ionically grafted nanoparticles

Abstract

A new class of conductive composite materials, solvent-free ionically grafted nanoparticles, were modeled by coarse-grained molecular dynamics methods. The grafted oligomeric counterions were observed to migrate between different cores, contributing to the unique properties of the materials. We investigated the dynamics by analyzing the dependence on temperature and structural parameters of the transport properties (self-diffusion coefficients, viscosities and conductivities) and counterion migration kinetics. Temperature dependence of all properties follows the Arrhenius equation, but chain length and grafting density have distinct effects on different properties. In particular, structural effects on the diffusion coefficients are described by the Rouse model and the theory of nanoparticles diffusing in polymer solutions, viscosities are strongly influenced by clustering of cores, and conductivities are dominated by the motions of oligomeric counterions. We analyzed the migration kinetics of oligomeric counterions in a manner analogous to unimer exchange between micellar aggregates. The counterion migrations follow the “double-core” mechanism and are kinetically controlled by neighboring-core collisions.

Graphical abstract: Diffusivities, viscosities, and conductivities of solvent-free ionically grafted nanoparticles

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
22 Mar 2013
Accepted
17 May 2013
First published
28 May 2013

Soft Matter, 2013,9, 6091-6102

Diffusivities, viscosities, and conductivities of solvent-free ionically grafted nanoparticles

B. Hong and A. Z. Panagiotopoulos, Soft Matter, 2013, 9, 6091 DOI: 10.1039/C3SM50832C

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