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INFRARED DICHROISM, CHAIN FLATTENING, AND THE BOUND FRACTION HISTOGRAM IN ADSORBED POLY(METHYL METHACRYLATE) LAYERS

Author(s)
FRANTZ, PGRANICK, S
Issued Date
1995-09
DOI
10.1021/ma00124a030
URI
https://scholarworks.unist.ac.kr/handle/201301/47437
Fulltext
https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/ma00124a030
Citation
MACROMOLECULES, v.28, no.20, pp.6915 - 6925
Abstract
We examine the distribution of adsorption substates, in contrast to their average. The distribution of infrared dichroism and bound fraction were determined in a model system (poly(methyl methacrylate) adsorbed chiefly by hydrogen bonding onto oxidized silicon from CCl4). The method was infrared spectroscopy in attenuated total reflection (FTIR-ATR). From the surface excess (Gamma), dichroic ratio (D-zx), and fraction of carbonyl groups bound to the surface (p), a broad distribution of conformations was found to prevail, from severely flattened (p approximate to 0.5 and D-zx << 1 for the asymmetric methyl stretch) to nearly solution-like (p approximate to 0.1 and D-zx 1 for the asymmetric methyl stretch). The extent of flattening depended mainly on the number of adsorption sites available to each chain it the time it deposited to the surface; chains that adsorbed later, finding fewer and fewer surface sites available, then became attached by fewer and fewer segments. This in turn implied that chains which arrived initially had the center-of-mass closer to the solid surface than those which arrived later. Conformational rearrangements were not observed on the experimental time scale of 3 h; this allowed determination of the distribution of conformational substates by subtraction of sequentially-acquired infrared spectra. The broad and asymmetric distribution of conformational substates appeared to originate, predictably, from the piecemeal process by which the surface was coated. It presents analogies with issues of random sequential adsorption.
Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
ISSN
0024-9297
Keyword
POLYMER ADSORPTIONMONODISPERSE POLYSTYRENEPOROUS-GLASSINTERFACEKINETICSDESORPTIONEXCHANGESPECTROSCOPYORIENTATIONSTATE

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