화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.118, No.7, 1729-1736, 1996
Specific Intermolecular Interaction of Carbon-Dioxide with Polymers
Fourier transform IR spectroscopy has been used to investigate the interaction of carbon dioxide with polymers. IR transmission and attenuated total reflectance spectra were obtained for CO2 impregnated into polymer films. It has been shown that the polymers possessing election-donating functional groups (e.g., carbonyl groups) exhibit specific interactions with CO2, most probably of Lewis acid-base nature. An unusual aspect is the use of the bending mode (nu(2)) of CO2 to probe polymer-CO2 interactions. The evidence of the interaction is the observation of the splitting of the band corresponding to the CO2 nu(2) mode. This splitting indicates that the double degeneracy of the nu(2) mode is removed due to the interaction of electron lone pairs of the carbonyl oxygen with the carbon atom of the CO2 molecule. This splitting has not been observed for polymers lacking electron-donating functional groups (e.g., poly(ethylene)). In contrast, the nu(3) made shows little if any sensitivity to this interaction, which is in accordance with the interaction where CO2 molecule acts as an electron acceptor. Finally, the chemical and engineering implications of this type of specific interaction of CO2 with polymers are discussed; perhaps the changes in spectra of CO2 incorporated into polymers might serve as a basis for prediction of the solubility of CO2 in polymers.