Nanoparticle Diffusion in Crowded Polymer Nanocomposite Melts.
Kaitlin WangKaren I WineyPublished in: ACS macro letters (2024)
This study examines nanoparticle diffusion in crowded polymer nanocomposites by diffusing small Al 2 O 3 nanoparticles (NPs) in SiO 2 -loaded P2VP matrices. Time-of-flight secondary ion mass spectroscopy (ToF-SIMS) measures Al 2 O 3 NP diffusion coefficients within a homogeneous PNC background of larger, immobile SiO 2 NPs. By developing a geometric model for the average interparticle distance in a system with two NP sizes, we quantify nanocomposite confinement relative to the Al 2 O 3 NP size with a bound layer. At low SiO 2 concentrations, Al 2 O 3 NP diffusion aligns with the neat polymer results. In more crowded nanocomposites with higher SiO 2 concentrations where the interparticle distance approaches the size of the mobile Al 2 O 3 NP, the 6.5 nm Al 2 O 3 NPs diffuse faster than predicted by both core-shell and vehicular diffusion models. Relative to our previous studies of NPs diffusing into polymers, these findings demonstrate that the local environment in crowded systems significantly complicates NP diffusion behavior and the bound layer lifetimes.