Dispersion-Driven Interphase Engineering and Quantitative Stress Transfer in Chemically Inert PTFE/MWCNT Nanocomposites

Abstract

Interphase engineering in chemically inert polymer nanocomposites remains fundamentally unresolved due to the difficulty of decoupling physical confinement effects from chemical functionalization. Here, we establish a quantitative dispersion–interphase–structure framework using non-functionalized PTFE/MWCNT nanocomposites as a model inert system. By systematically varying nanotube loading (10:1–10:4 PTFE:MWCNT), we isolate dispersion-driven physical interactions in the complete absence of covalent bonding. Raman spectroscopy reveals a monotonic reduction in ID/IG (1.08–0.97) and a reproducible G-band upshift (~6 cm⁻¹), corresponding to an estimated interfacial strain of ~0.22%, providing evidence of measurable stress transfer primarily arising from physical confinement. X-ray diffraction coupled with FWHM and Scherrer analysis demonstrates crystallite enlargement at intermediate loadings, while DSC-based crystallinity calculations identify a maximum relative crystallinity at 10:2 composition. At higher nanotube loading, partial re-agglomeration and confinement-dominated restriction reduce crystalline ordering despite elevated melting temperature (328–334 °C). These results suggest that dispersion plays a significant role as a thermodynamic regulator of interphase evolution in fluoropolymer nanocomposites. This work provides insight into the underlying mechanisms of stress transfer and crystallization behavior in chemically inert CNT/polymer systems and establishes a rational strategy for interphase engineering without chemical modification.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
04 Mar 2026
Accepted
16 May 2026
First published
18 May 2026

Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript

Dispersion-Driven Interphase Engineering and Quantitative Stress Transfer in Chemically Inert PTFE/MWCNT Nanocomposites

G. Sundaravadivel, R. Jeya Raj and S. Rajiv, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 2026, Accepted Manuscript , DOI: 10.1039/D6CP00808A

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