Browsing by Author "Li, Bingbing"
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- Phase Behavior of Poly(Caprolactone) Based Polymer Blends As Langmuir Films at the Air/Water InterfaceLi, Bingbing (Virginia Tech, 2007-01-31)Poly (caprolactone) (PCL) has been widely studied as a model system for investigating polymer crystallization. In this thesis, PCL crystallization along with other phase transitions in PCL-based polymer blends are studied as Langmuir films at the air/water (A/W) interface. In order to understand the phase behavior of PCL-based blends, surface pressure induced crystallization of PCL in single-component Langmuir monolayers was first studied by Brewster angle microscopy (BAM). PCL crystals observed during film compression exhibit butterfly-shapes. During expansion of the crystallized film, polymer chains detach from the crystals and diffuse back into the monolayer as the crystals "melt". Electron diffraction on Langmuir-Schaefer films suggests that the lamellar crystals are oriented with the chain axes perpendicular to the substrate surface, while atomic force microscopy (AFM) reveals a crystal thickness of ~ 7.6 nm. In addition, the competition between lower segmental mobility and a greater degree of undercooling with increasing molar mass produces a maximum average growth rate at intermediate molar mass. PCL was blended with poly(t-butyl acrylate) (PtBA) to study the influence of PtBA on the morphologies of PCL crystals grown in monolayers. For PCL-rich blends, BAM studies reveal dendritic morphologies of PCL crystals. The thicknesses of the PCL dendrites are ~ 7-8 nm. BAM studies during isobaric area relaxation experiments at different surface pressure reveal morphological transitions from highly branched dendrites, to six-arm dendrites, four-arm dendrites, seaweedlike crystals, and distorted rectangular crystals. In contrast, PCL crystallization is suppressed in PtBA-rich blend films. For immiscible blends of PCL and polystyrene (PS) with intermediate molar masses as Langmuir films, the surface concentration of PCL is the only factor influencing surface pressure below the collapse transition. For PS-rich blends, both BAM and AFM studies reveal that PS nanoparticle aggregates formed at very low surface pressure form networks during film compression. For PCL-rich blends, small PS aggregates serve as heterogeneous nucleation centers for the growth of PCL crystals. During film expansion, BAM images show a gradual change in the surface morphology from highly continuous networklike structures (PS-rich blends) to broken ringlike structures (intermediate composition) to small discontinuous aggregates (PCL-rich blends).
- Surface Characterization of Poly (epsilon-caprolactone) at the Air/Water InterfaceLi, Bingbing (Virginia Tech, 2004-09-15)Surface behavior of poly (epsilon-caprolactone) (PCL) have been studied at the air/water interface (A/W). PCL is a hydrophobic and crystalline polyester with a glass transition temperature around -60 degrees centigrade, a melting point around 55 degrees centigrade, excellent biocompatibility, and low toxicity. In the past decade, PCL based systems have attracted considerable interest for controlled-release drug delivery and as scaffolds for tissue engineering, that require a fundamental understanding of PCL's degradation mechanisms and crystallization properties. PCL spherulites were commonly observed in previous bulk studies. This thesis focuses on PCL crystallization in Langmuir monolayers. Brewster angle microscopy (BAM) studies show that square, distorted rectangular, and dendritic crystals form at the A/W interface. While dendritic structures have been observed in poly (ethylene oxide) (PEO) thin film on solid substrates, this study of PCL is the first time that dendritic morphologies have been observed at the A/W interface for a linear flexible-coil polymer. As far as we know, the crystallization of flexible-coil polymers at the A/W interface is a brand new area of research. These findings may provide an interesting model system for studying crystallization in confined geometries and the effect of crystallinity on enzyme catalyzed hydrolysis of this important biodegradable polymer at the A/W interface. The main objectives of this thesis were to investigate the phase behavior of PCL at the A/W interface, gain a deeper understanding of the nucleation and growth mechanism of PCL crystallization at the A/W interface through surface pressure-area isotherms and isobaric area relaxation analyses, and interpret the effects of molecular weight on the nucleation and growth mechanism, and morphologies of semicrystalline PCL crystallized in Langmuir monolayers at the A/W interface.