2006 AIChE Annual Meeting
(180a) Mechanical Studies of Cellulose Nanocrystals-Polymer Composite Thin Films
Authors
In this study, the polymer/nanocrystal films are made using the layer-by-layer deposition method. Monolayers of chitosan and cellulose nanocrystals were alternatively adsorbed onto Si substrate to produce a thin film. The films' elastic moduli were measured using Brillouin light scattering (for films as thin as 250 nm) in the backscattering geometry. Using this technique, elastic properties of a material are derived from the inelastic scattering of light as it interacts with acoustic phonons. Comparison between the behaviors of surface and bulk acoustic modes allowed us to elucidate the effect of the thickness of individual layers relative to the total film thickness on the overall elastic properties of the composite. The elastic moduli of polymer/nanocrystal composites with crystals of different aspect ratios were measured using Brillouin light scattering. Short cellulose nanocrystals with length of ~200 nm were produced from the hydrolysis of filter paper powder in sulfuric acid. Long crystals with lengths of several microns were produced by the bleaching and hydrolysis of tunicate using sulfuric acid. Layer-by-layer films are fabricated using alternative depositions of chitosan or poly diallyldimethylammonium chloride (PDDA) and cellulose nanocrystals. The moduli of films with long crystals are observed to be dramatically higher than films with short crystals for both chitosan/nanocrystal and PDDA/nanocrystal films. It is also observed that the moduli of chitosan/nanocrystal films are higher than that of PDDA/nanocrystal films.