4 resultados para Pema viridis

em ArchiMeD - Elektronische Publikationen der Universität Mainz - Alemanha


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Die innerhalb dieser Arbeit mittels moderner Festkörper-NMR-Methoden untersuchte molekulare Dynamik in Poly(methacrylat)-Schmelzen und Polyphenylen-Dendrimeren ist durch eine bemerkenswerte Anisotropie gekennzeichnet.Die Anisotropie der molekularen Dynamik zeigt sich in geschmolzenen, ataktischen und isotaktischen Poly(ethylmethacrylaten) (PEMA) durch die Zeitskalenseparation der segmentellen alpha-Relaxation von einem etwa zwei Größenordnungen langsameren Relaxationsprozeß, welcher die Isotropisierung der Polymerhauptkette wiedergibt. Die Isotropisierungsdynamik der Polymerhauptkette wird - mit Ausnahme von PMMA - durch eine universelle, nicht-korrelationszeitenverteilte Relaxationsmode der Poly(methacrylate) quantifiziert, deren Temperaturabhängigkeit durch einen einheitlichen WLF-Parametersatz beschrieben werden kann. Geometrisch läßt sich die Isotropisierung der Hauptkette durch Sprungprozesse beliebiger Amplitude von Kettenstücken mit gestreckter all-trans-Konformation interpretieren. Die Kette zeigt eine außergewöhnliche konformative Stabilität. WAXS-Messungen deuten für PEMA und seine höheren Homologen die Existenz einer Schichtstruktur an, in der sich die steifen, polaren Hauptketten lokal in Monolagen anordnen, welche durch Bereiche zusammengelagerter Seitengruppen getrennt sind. Die Festkörper-NMR-Untersuchungen an Polyphenylen-Dendrimeren bringen zwei zentrale Aspekte in der wechselseitigen Beziehung von Struktur und Dynamik hervor. Zum einen ist die beobachtete molekulare Dynamik auf lokale Reorientierungen einzelner, terminaler Phenylringe um definierte Achsen beschränkt. Polyphenylen-Dendrimermoleküle sind unter diesen Bewegungen formstabil. Zum anderen können sowohl schnelle, als auch langsame Phenylreorientierungen nachgewiesen werden, wobei jeweils die intramolekulare Packungsdichte der Phenylringe das dynamische Verhalten der Polyphenylen-Dendrimere kontrolliert.

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In this thesis, we investigated the evaporation of sessile microdroplets on different solid substrates. Three major aspects were studied: the influence of surface hydrophilicity and heterogeneity on the evaporation dynamics for an insoluble solid substrate, the influence of external process parameters and intrinsic material properties on microstructuring of soluble polymer substrates and the influence of an increased area to volume ratio in a microfluidic capillary, when evaporation is hindered. In the first part, the evaporation dynamics of pure sessile water drops on smooth self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of thiols or disulfides on gold on mica was studied. With increasing surface hydrophilicity the drop stayed pinned longer. Thus, the total evaporation time of a given initial drop volume was shorter, since the drop surface, through which the evaporation occurs, stays longer large. Usually, for a single drop the volume decreased linearly with t1.5, t being the evaporation time, for a diffusion-controlled evaporation process. However, when we measured the total evaporation time, ttot, for multiple droplets with different initial volumes, V0, we found a scaling of the form V0 = attotb. The more hydrophilic the substrate was, the more showed the scaling exponent a tendency to an increased value up to 1.6. This can be attributed to an increasing evaporation rate through a thin water layer in the vicinity of the drop. Under the assumption of a constant temperature at the substrate surface a cooling of the droplet and thus a decreased evaporation rate could be excluded as a reason for the different scaling exponent by simulations performed by F. Schönfeld at the IMM, Mainz. In contrast, for a hairy surface, made of dialkyldisulfide SAMs with different chain lengths and a 1:1 mixture of hydrophilic and hydrophobic end groups (hydroxy versus methyl group), the scaling exponent was found to be ~ 1.4. It increased to ~ 1.5 with increasing hydrophilicity. A reason for this observation can only be speculated: in the case of longer hydrophobic alkyl chains the formation of an air layer between substrate and surface might be favorable. Thus, the heat transport to the substrate might be reduced, leading to a stronger cooling and thus decreased evaporation rate. In the second part, the microstructuring of polystyrene surfaces by drops of toluene, a good solvent, was investigated. For this a novel deposition technique was developed, with which the drop can be deposited with a syringe. The polymer substrate is lying on a motorized table, which picks up the pendant drop by an upward motion until a liquid bridge is formed. A consecutive downward motion of the table after a variable delay, i.e. the contact time between drop and polymer, leads to the deposition of the droplet, which can evaporate. The resulting microstructure is investigated in dependence of the processes parameters, i.e. the approach and the retraction speed of the substrate and the delay between them, and in dependence of the intrinsic material properties, i.e. the molar mass and the type of the polymer/solvent system. The principal equivalence with the microstructuring by the ink-jet technique was demonstrated. For a high approach and retraction speed of 9 mm/s and no delay between them, a concave microtopology was observed. In agreement with the literature, this can be explained by a flow of solvent and the dissolved polymer to the rim of the pinned droplet, where polymer is accumulated. This effect is analogue to the well-known formation of ring-like stains after the evaporation of coffee drops (coffee-stain effect). With decreasing retraction speed down to 10 µm/s the resulting surface topology changes from concave to convex. This can be explained with the increasing dissolution of polymer into the solvent drop prior to the evaporation. If the polymer concentration is high enough, gelation occurs instead of a flow to the rim and the shape of the convex droplet is received. With increasing delay time from below 0 ms to 1s the depth of the concave microwells decreases from 4.6 µm to 3.2 µm. However, a convex surface topology could not be obtained, since for longer delay times the polymer sticks to the tip of the syringe. Thus, by changing the delay time a fine-tuning of the concave structure is accomplished, while by changing the retraction speed a principal change of the microtopolgy can be achieved. We attribute this to an additional flow inside the liquid bridge, which enhanced polymer dissolution. Even if the pendant drop is evaporating about 30 µm above the polymer surface without any contact (non-contact mode), concave structures were observed. Rim heights as high as 33 µm could be generated for exposure times of 20 min. The concave structure exclusively lay above the flat polymer surface outside the structure even after drying. This shows that toluene is taken up permanently. The increasing rim height, rh, with increasing exposure time to the solvent vapor obeys a diffusion law of rh = rh0  tn, with n in the range of 0.46 ~ 0.65. This hints at a non-Fickian swelling process. A detailed analysis showed that the rim height of the concave structure is modulated, unlike for the drop deposition. This is due to the local stress relaxation, which was initiated by the increasing toluene concentration in the extruded polymer surface. By altering the intrinsic material parameters i.e. the polymer molar mass and the polymer/solvent combination, several types of microstructures could be formed. With increasing molar mass from 20.9 kDa to 1.44 MDa the resulting microstructure changed from convex, to a structure with a dimple in the center, to concave, to finally an irregular structure. This observation can be explained if one assumes that the microstructuring is dominated by two opposing effects, a decreasing solubility with increasing polymer molar mass, but an increasing surface tension gradient leading to instabilities of Marangoni-type. Thus, a polymer with a low molar mass close or below the entanglement limit is subject to a high dissolution rate, which leads to fast gelation compared to the evaporation rate. This way a coffee-rim like effect is eliminated early and a convex structure results. For high molar masses the low dissolution rate and the low polymer diffusion might lead to increased surface tension gradients and a typical local pile-up of polymer is found. For intermediate polymer masses around 200 kDa, the dissolution and evaporation rate are comparable and the typical concave microtopology is found. This interpretation was supported by a quantitative estimation of the diffusion coefficient and the evaporation rate. For a different polymer/solvent system, polyethylmethacrylate (PEMA)/ethylacetate (EA), exclusively concave structures were found. Following the statements above this can be interpreted with a lower dissolution rate. At low molar masses the concentration of PEMA in EA most likely never reaches the gelation point. Thus, a concave instead of a convex structure occurs. At the end of this section, the optically properties of such microstructures for a potential application as microlenses are studied with laser scanning confocal microscopy. In the third part, the droplet was confined into a glass microcapillary to avoid evaporation. Since here, due to an increased area to volume ratio, the surface properties of the liquid and the solid walls became important, the influence of the surface hydrophilicity of the wall on the interfacial tension between two immiscible liquid slugs was investigated. For this a novel method for measuring the interfacial tension between the two liquids within the capillary was developed. This technique was demonstrated by measuring the interfacial tensions between slugs of pure water and standard solvents. For toluene, n-hexane and chloroform 36.2, 50.9 and 34.2 mN/m were measured at 20°C, which is in a good agreement with data from the literature. For a slug of hexane in contact with a slug of pure water containing ethanol in a concentration range between 0 and 70 (v/v %), a difference of up to 6 mN/m was found, when compared to commercial ring tensiometry. This discrepancy is still under debate.

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In this work polymer brushes on both flat and curved substrates were prepared by grafting from and grafting to techniques. The brushes on flat substrates were patterned on the µm-scale with the use of an inkjet printer. Thus it was demonstrated that chemistry with an inkjet printer is feasible. The inkjet printer was used to deposit microdroplets of acid. The saponification of surface-immobilized ATRP initiators containing an ester bond occurred in these microdroplets. The changes in the monolayer of ester molecules due to saponification were amplified by SI-ATRP. It was possible to correlate the polymer brush thickness to effectiveness of saponification. The use of an inkjet printer allowed for simultaneously screening of parameters such as type of acid, concentration of acid, and contact time between acid and surface. A dip-coater was utilized in order to test the saponification independent of droplet evaporation. The advantage of this developed process is its versatility. It can be applied to all surface-immobilized initiators containing ester bonds. The technique has additionally been used to selectively defunctionalize the initiator molecules covering a microcantilever on one side of a cantilever. An asymmetric coating of the cantilever with polymer brushes was thus generated. An asymmetric coating allows the use of a microcantilever for sensing applications. The preparation of nanocomposites comprised of polyorganosiloxane microgel particles functionalized with poly(ethyl methacrylate) (PEMA) brushes and linear, but entangled, PEMA chains is described in the second major part of this thesis. Measurement of the interparticle distance was performed using scanning probe microscopy and grazing incidence small angle X-ray scattering. The matrix molecular weight at which the nanocomposite showed microphase separation was related to abrupt changes in inter-particle distance. Microphase separation occurred once the matrix molecular exceeded the molecular weight of the brushes. The trigger for the microphase separation was a contraction of the polymer brushes, as the measurements of inter-particle distance have revealed. The brushes became impenetrable for the matrix chains upon contraction and thus behaved as hard spheres. The contraction led to a loss of anchoring between particles and matrix, as shown by nanowear tests using an atomic force microscope. Polyorganosiloxane microgel particles were functionalized with 13C enriched poly(ethyl methacrylate) brushes. New synthetic pathways were developed in order to enrich not the entire brush with 13C, but only exclusively selected regions. 13C chemical shift anisotropy, an advanced NMR technique, can thus be used in order to gather information about the extended conformations in the 13C enriched regions of the PEMA chains immobilized on the µ-gel-g-PEMA particles. The third part of this thesis deals with the grafting to of polymeric fullerene materials on silicon substrates. Active ester chemistry was employed in order to prepare the polymeric fullerene materials and graft these materials covalently on amino-functionalized silicon substrates.rn

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In dieser Arbeit wurden polymere Kompositmaterialien mit Hilfe von Festkörper-NMR-Techniken untersucht, um den Einfluß von Polymer-Festkörper-Kontakten auf molekulare Materialeigenschaften zu betrachten. Dabei wurden sowohl Analysen am Polymer als auch am Füllmaterial durchgeführt.rnrnIm ersten Teil der Arbeit wurde die Dynamik von Poly(ethylmethacrylat) (PEMA) in sphärischen Bürstenpartikeln gemessen. Diese Bürsten bestanden aus einem Poly(silsesquioxan)-Kern und verpfropften PEMA-Ketten, die über ATRP (atom transfer radical polymerization) an verschiedenen Kettensequenzen mit 13C an der Carboxylgruppe markiert wurden. Statische 13C-NMR-Messungen konnten zeigen, dass die Dynamik dieser Sequenzen unabhängig vom Abstand zur Oberfläche verlangsamt ist, was auf eine eingeschränkte Reptation zurückgeführt wurde.rnrnDer zweite Teil der Arbeit beschäftigt sich mit den molekularen Unterschieden von Silika-Naturkautschuk-Kompositen, die über mechanisches Mischen bzw. über eine Sol-Gel-Reaktion hergestellt wurden. Durch kinetische 1H-NMR-Messungen wurde der Umsatz der Sol-Gel-Reaktion bestimmt. Mittels heteronuklearen 29Si{1H}-NMR-Korrelationsexperimenten wurde ein direkter räumlicher Kontakt zwischen dem Inneren der Partikel und dem Polymer nachgewiesen. Dies belegt experimentell, dass im Kompositmaterial die Polymerketten in den durch Sol-Gel-Reaktion hergestellten Silikapartikeln eingeschlossen sind.