In this article, a mathematical model is proposed for predicting solvent self-diffusion coefficients in amorphous glassy polymers based on free volume theory. The basis of this new model involves consideration of the plasticization effects induced by small molecular solvents to correctly estimate th
Diffusion of small molecules in glassy polymers
✍ Scribed by M. Pönitsch; P. Gotthardt; A. Grüger; H. G. Brion; R. Kirchheim
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 255 KB
- Volume
- 35
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-6266
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✦ Synopsis
Small molecules in glassy polymers are considered to occupy sites with a distribution of free energies of dissolution. Then their diffusivity depends on concentration and temperature in the same way as it has been derived for hydrogen atoms in metallic glasses. For hydrogen it was shown that the tracer diffusion coefficient is proportional to the activity coefficient of the solute atoms. The latter can be evaluated from measured data of sorption of the small molecules in the polymer. Knowing this quantity, the thermodynamic factor can be calculated and the concentration dependence of the mutual diffusion coefficient is obtained in excellent agreement with published experimental results. New experimental results are presented for the diffusion coefficient of CO 2 in Kapton and four polycarbonates (BPA-PC, BPZ-PC, TMBPA-PC, and TMC-PC) in the low CO 2 pressure range of a few mbar up to 1 bar. The results are in agreement with the model developed for hydrogen. The reference diffusion coefficient, which is a fitting parameter of the model that is independent of the distribution of free energies is smallest for the polycarbonate BPZ-PC having a high g-relaxation temperature. This correlation between the diffusion coefficient and the dynamics of the polymer can be found for other substituted polycarbonates as well.
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