화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.47, No.24, 2441-2448, 2009
The Stiffening of Ultrathin Polymer Films in the Rubbery Regime: The Relative Contributions of Membrane Stress and Surface Tension
We have previously reported on a new nanobubble inflation technique we have developed to measure the absolute creep compliance of polymer films at thicknesses down to similar to 10 nm (1-5). One of the more surprising results to collie out of these studies was the observation that as the film thickness decreased the rubbery plateau compliance was seen to decrease dramatically At the thinnest film thickness (similar to 10 nm) the compliance decreased (or conversely the stiffness increased) by some 3 orders of magnitude from the bulk value. It is known that, at the nanometer scale, surface tension effects can become significant. We examine here the contribution of surface tension to the observed stiffening and show that, while the contribution is important, it does not account for the degree of stiffening observed. This suggests that molecular or confinement induced stiffening is the major factor. (C) 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc J Polym Sci Part B Polym Phys 47, 2441-2448, 2009