Glass Transition Temperature in Polystyrene Supported Thin Films: a SPM-based Investigation of the Role of Molecular Entanglement
Franco Dinelli, Tommaso Sgrilli, Andrea Ricci, Paolo Baschieri,, Pasqualantonio Pingue, Manjunath Puttaswamy, Peter Kingshott

TL;DR
This study investigates how molecular entanglement influences the glass transition temperature of supported polystyrene thin films using a modified scanning probe microscope, revealing that entanglement and substrate interactions can restore bulk-like properties.
Contribution
It provides new insights into the role of molecular entanglement and substrate interactions on the glass transition temperature of supported polystyrene films, a topic previously not well understood.
Findings
Molecular entanglement and strong substrate interactions increase the glass transition temperature.
Supported films with entanglement exhibit bulk-like viscoelastic properties.
The method allows nanoscale monitoring of viscoelastic behavior during temperature changes.
Abstract
The viscoelastic properties of thin polymeric films represent a central issue, especially for nanotechnological applications. In particular, it is highly relevant the dependence of viscoelasticity on the temperature. For polystyrene it is known that the glass transition temperature is dependent on the film thickness. At present, there is wide agreement on the importance of the two interfaces that the films form with the air and with the substrate. The relevance of molecular entanglement has been also stressed for the case of suspended films. However, the role of molecular entanglement on the glass transition temperature of supported films still remains elusive. In order to investigate the viscoelastic properties of thin films on the nanoscale, we have employed a scanning probe microscope suitably modified in order to monitor the indentation of a tip into a polymeric film during a given…
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Taxonomy
TopicsForce Microscopy Techniques and Applications · Mechanical and Optical Resonators · Carbon Nanotubes in Composites
