화학공학소재연구정보센터
Macromolecules, Vol.42, No.13, 4681-4689, 2009
Diffusion in Model Networks as Studied by NMR and Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopy
We have studied the diffusion of small solvent molecules (octane) and larger hydrophobic dye probes in octanc-swollen poly(dimethyl siloxane) linear-chain Solutions and end-linked model networks, using pulsed-gradient nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) and fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS), respectively, focusing on diffusion in the bulk polymer Lip to the equilibrium degree of swelling of the networks, that is 4.8 at most. The combination of these results allows for new conclusions oil the feasibility of different theories describing probe diffusion in concentrated polymer systems. While octane diffusion shows no cross-link dependence, the larger dyes are increasingly restricted by Fixed chemical meshes. The simple Fujita free-volume theory proved most feasible to describe probe diffusion in linear long-chain solutions with realistic parameters, while better fits were obtained assuming it stretched exponential dependence oil concentration. Importantly, we have analyzed the cross-link specific effect on probe diffusion independently of any specific model by comparing the best-fit interpolation of the solution data with the diffusion in the networks. The most reasonable description is obtained by assuming that the cross-link effect is additive in the effective friction coefficient of the probes. The concentration dependences as well as the data compared at the equilibrium degrees of swelling indicate that swelling heterogeneities and diffusant shape have a substantial influence on small-molecule diffusion in networks.