TY - JOUR
T1 - Effective Viscosity of Lightly UVO-Treated Polystyrene Films on Silicon with Different Molecular Weights
AU - Yu, Xuanji
AU - Yiu, Pakman
AU - Weng, Lu Tao
AU - Chen, Fei
AU - Tsui, Ophelia K.C.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Copyright 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/2/12
Y1 - 2019/2/12
N2 - Recently, we found that a brief, 1 s exposure to ultraviolet ozone (UVO) can cause the effective viscosity, n eff , of polystyrene films supported by oxide-coated silicon (PS-SiOx) to increase by more than 100 times. In this experiment, we study the phenomenon with different PS molecular weights, M w , from 2.4 to 451 kg/mol. We found that n eff was increased for all M w 's when the film thickness, h 0 , was decreased below an onset thickness comparable to the radius of gyration, R g , of the polymer. For h 0 greater than the onset thickness, the n eff versus h 0 dependence varies with M w . Specifically, for M w ≥ 60K g/mol n eff was constant, equal to the bulk viscosity. For M w < 60K g/mol, n eff decreased with decreasing h 0 in the same way as that of the pristine counterparts. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) shows that oxygenated groups are formed in the films after the UVO treatment. We propose that the oxygenated groups can interact with the OH groups on the SiOx surface to produce increases in n n eff . Correspondingly, we found that the n eff data could fit well to a three-layer model containing a dynamically dead layer on the substrate. Results of the fit are consistent with a surface layer with a thickness of ∼R g and the following attributes. Below entanglement, the mobility of this layer is enhanced relative to the bulk polymer. Above entanglement, couplings between the surface chains and the chains in the inner, bulklike region force the surface chains to flow as the inner chains. As a result, enhanced mobility can only be found in short-range, local motions over depths of the order of the average distance between entanglements. This picture explains a variety of surface relaxation phenomena reported in the literature.
AB - Recently, we found that a brief, 1 s exposure to ultraviolet ozone (UVO) can cause the effective viscosity, n eff , of polystyrene films supported by oxide-coated silicon (PS-SiOx) to increase by more than 100 times. In this experiment, we study the phenomenon with different PS molecular weights, M w , from 2.4 to 451 kg/mol. We found that n eff was increased for all M w 's when the film thickness, h 0 , was decreased below an onset thickness comparable to the radius of gyration, R g , of the polymer. For h 0 greater than the onset thickness, the n eff versus h 0 dependence varies with M w . Specifically, for M w ≥ 60K g/mol n eff was constant, equal to the bulk viscosity. For M w < 60K g/mol, n eff decreased with decreasing h 0 in the same way as that of the pristine counterparts. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) shows that oxygenated groups are formed in the films after the UVO treatment. We propose that the oxygenated groups can interact with the OH groups on the SiOx surface to produce increases in n n eff . Correspondingly, we found that the n eff data could fit well to a three-layer model containing a dynamically dead layer on the substrate. Results of the fit are consistent with a surface layer with a thickness of ∼R g and the following attributes. Below entanglement, the mobility of this layer is enhanced relative to the bulk polymer. Above entanglement, couplings between the surface chains and the chains in the inner, bulklike region force the surface chains to flow as the inner chains. As a result, enhanced mobility can only be found in short-range, local motions over depths of the order of the average distance between entanglements. This picture explains a variety of surface relaxation phenomena reported in the literature.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85060296171
U2 - 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b02438
DO - 10.1021/acs.macromol.8b02438
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85060296171
SN - 0024-9297
VL - 52
SP - 877
EP - 885
JO - Macromolecules
JF - Macromolecules
IS - 3
ER -