Polymer materials

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A polymer is a substance composed of molecules with large molecular mass composed of repeating structural units, or monomers, connected by covalent chemical bonds. polymers comprise a large class of natural and synthetic materials with a variety of properties and purposes. Natural polymer materials such as shellac and amber have been in use for centuries. Biopolymers such as proteins (for example hair, skin and part of the bone structure) and nucleic acids play crucial roles in biological processes. A variety of other natural polymers exist, such as cellulose, which is the main constituent of wood and paper.

Fig. 1.Topography scan of lamellar surface of a lozenge-shaped crystal of polyethylene. High magnification (150 nm X 150 nm) shows grainy structure of this surface with features 4-6 nm in size. Image is obtained by DP14/HI'RES probe on Dimension 5000 AFM.

The structural properties of a polymer relate to the physical arrangement of monomers along the backbone of the chain. Structure has a strong influence on the other properties of a polymer. In some cases, the term crystalline when applied to polymers finds identical usage to that used in conventional crystallography. For example, the structure of a crystalline protein or polynucleotide, such as a sample prepared for x-ray crystallography, may be defined in terms of a conventional unit cell composed of one or more polymer molecules with cell dimensions of hundreds of angstroms or more.

A synthetic polymer may be described as crystalline if it contains regions of three-dimensional ordering on atomic (rather than macromolecular) length scales, usually arising from intramolecular folding and/or stacking of adjacent chains. Synthetic polymers may consist of both crystalline and amorphous regions; the degree of crystallinity may be expressed in terms of a weight fraction or volume fraction of crystalline material. Few synthetic polymers are entirely crystalline.

Image in Fig. 1. is a topography scan of lamellar surface of a lozenge-shaped crystal of polyethylene. High magnification (150 nm X 150 nm) shows grainy structure of this surface with features 4-6 nm in size. Image is obtained by DP14/HI'RES probe on Dimension 5000 AFM.

(a) Organization of liquid crystalline domains. Height Tapping mode image performed by DP14/HI'RES probe. Scan size 10 µm, height 25 nm. (b) High-resolution phase image DP14/HI'RES probe. Scan size 200 nm, Z-scale 50°
Fig. 2.Height and phase images of a spin-coated film of semi-flexible star-shaped mesogen. Imaging was performed with Hi’Res tip mounted on NSC14 cantilever. Multimode Nanoscope IIIa. Images courtesy of D.A. Ivanov and I.R Gearba (Free University of Brussels, Belgium), synthesis due to Dr. Matthias Lehmann (Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany).

Liquid crystal polymers (LCPs) are a unique class of wholly aromatic polyester polymers that provide previously unavailable high performance properties. In particular, they are highly inert chemically and highly resistant to fire.

Images in Fig. 2 present the surface texture of semi-flexible star-shaped mesogen [1] having an aromatic core and flexible alkyl side-chains. This system forms the hexagonal columnar mesophase which slowly transforms into a columnar crystal at room temperature. The image (a) shows the organization of liquid crystalline domains at the scale of several microns. On the high-resolution phase image (b), one can see the presence of individual columns formed by molecules stacked on top of each other. The molecular diameter found from X-ray diffraction and AFM is approx. 4.2 nm. The alternation of white and black stripes in the phase image (b) is attributed to the presence of liquid crystalline (soft) and crystalline (hard) regions.

Use of most sharp probes is always preferable for high-resolution studies of polymer crystals. Yet the sharp tips can be less subjective to damage when softer cantilevers are used. Therefore probes with sharp tip should have stiffness less than 5 N/m. Actually, because sharp tips experience less adhesive interactions therefore probes with such tips can have very soft cantilevers and still be applied for tapping mode measurements. You can see high resolution imaging for details.


1. Chemistry of Materials 16(3) (2004), 374
Tapping mode


High-resolution imaging
Hi-RES probes mounted on
soft cantilevers
DP14/Hi'RES-W/AlBS

 
 

 

 

 

 
 

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