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Phase separation as a tool to control dispersion of multiwall carbon nanotubes in polymeric blends. | LitMetric

Phase separation as a tool to control dispersion of multiwall carbon nanotubes in polymeric blends.

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces

Department of Chemical Engineering and Leuven Materials Research Center, Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Willem de Croylaan 46, B-3001, Leuven, Belgium.

Published: March 2010

Conducting polymeric materials with stable phase microstructures have a range of potential applications. In this work, it is investigated whether phase separation in polymer blends can be used as a tool to create well dispersed conducting filler rich domains in 3D with controlled morphology, potentially resulting in more effective percolation. The effect of amine functionalized multiwall carbon nanotubes (NH(2)-MWCNTs) on the thermally induced phase separation processes in poly[(alpha-methyl styrene)-co-acrylonitrile]/poly(methyl methacrylate) (PalphaMSAN/PMMA) blends was monitored by melt rheology, conductivity spectroscopy, and microscopic techniques. Electron microscopic images revealed that the phase separation resulted in a heterogeneous distribution of NH(2)-MWCNTs in the blends. The migration of NH(2)-MWCNTs is controlled by the thermodynamic forces that drive phase separation and led to an increase in their local concentration in a specific phase resulting in percolative "network-like" structure. Conductivity spectroscopy measurements demonstrated that the blends with 2 wt % NH(2)-MWCNTs that showed insulating properties for a one phasic system revealed highly conducting material in the melt state (two phasic) as a result of phase separation. By quenching this morphology, a highly conducting material with controlled dispersion of MWCNTs can be achieved. Furthermore, the role of NH(2)-MWCNTs in stabilizing the PMMA droplets against flow induced coalescence in 85/15 PalphaMSAN/PMMA blends was also established for the first time. It was observed that at a typical loading of 1.25 wt % NH(2)-MWCNTs the coalescence was completely suppressed on a practical time scale.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/am9008067DOI Listing

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