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Understanding the Decreased Segmental Dynamics of Supported Thin Polymer Films Reported by Incoherent Neutron Scattering
Published
Author(s)
Changhuai Ye, Clinton G. Wiener, Madhu Sudan Tyagi, David Uhrig, Sara Orski, Christopher Soles, Bryan D. Vogt, David S. Simmons
Abstract
Incoherent neutron scattering (INS) has commonly reported a suppression of segmental dynamics for supported thin polymer films as thickness is decreased, which is counter to expectations based on other measurement techniques such as ellipsometry and fluorescence. Here INS is utilized to measure the dynamics of thin films of comb polystyrene (PS) from 50 K to 525 K. There is a significant suppression in dynamics as determined from the 5-ns Debye-Waller factor, 2>, as measured I]via INS for films as thick as 213 nm, while there is no change in the glass transition temperature (Tg) as determined by ellipsometry for films as thin as 20 nm. This poor correlation between Tg from ellipsometry and dynamics as measured by 2> is attributed to contamination of nanosecond 2> by incipient relaxation processes, differences in sensitivity to the postulated dynamically dead layer near the substrate due to the relative weighting of the distribution of dynamics between the two techniques, differences in the timescales probed, and possible decoupling between fast and slow dynamics under nanoconfinement. These results suggest that branching of PS significantly increases the interactions with the substrate to suppress the dynamics. Both technique-specific sensitivity to time scales and its weighing of the average over the gradient in dynamic properties present at the interfaces are important to consider when qualitatively different phenomenon are observed.
Ye, C.
, Wiener, C.
, Tyagi, M.
, Uhrig, D.
, Orski, S.
, Soles, C.
, Vogt, B.
and Simmons, D.
(2015),
Understanding the Decreased Segmental Dynamics of Supported Thin Polymer Films Reported by Incoherent Neutron Scattering, Macromolecules, [online], https://tsapps.nist.gov/publication/get_pdf.cfm?pub_id=917133
(Accessed October 8, 2025)