Polymer Free Volume and Its Connection to the Glass
Transition
Version 2 2016-06-08, 14:54Version 2 2016-06-08, 14:54
Version 1 2016-05-23, 19:20Version 1 2016-05-23, 19:20
Posted on 2016-05-23 - 00:00
In this Perspective we summarize
the most widely used definitions
of free volume and illustrate the differences between them, including
the important distinction between total free volume
and excess free volume. We discuss the implications
when alternative estimates for free volume are inserted into relationships
that connect experimentally measured properties (e.g., the viscosity)
to free volume, such as those proposed by Doolittle, Fox and Flory,
Simha and Boyer, Cohen and Turnbull, and Williams, Landel, and Ferry.
Turning to the results of our own locally correlated lattice (LCL)
model, we demonstrate, by analyzing data for a set of over 50 polymers,
that our calculations for total percent free volume not only lead
to a predictive relationship with experimental glass transition temperatures
but also allow us to place the different definitions of free volume
within a physical picture of what the proposed contributions represent.
We find that melts go glassy upon reaching a “boundary”
of minimum (total) percent free volume that depends roughly linearly
on temperature. We interpret this boundary as being close to the T-dependent free volume associated with solid-like segmental
vibrational motions. Since the LCL model is a first-principles thermodynamic
theory, we are also able to link our free volume predictions to similar
patterns that we find in the predicted entropy per theoretical segment.
Our results are consistent with a picture wherein the difference in
entropy between the melt (liquid) state and corresponding solid state
vanishes as the glass transition is approached. This leads us to a
new connection with the work of Adams and Gibbs, whose model reflects
a similar vanishing of the configurational entropy. We conclude by
discussing why the approach to the glassy state is best viewed as
being controlled via the linked contributions of
free volume and temperature.
CITE THIS COLLECTION
DataCite
DataCiteDataCite
No result found
White, Ronald
P.; E. G. Lipson, Jane (2016). Polymer Free Volume and Its Connection to the Glass
Transition. ACS Publications. Collection. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.6b00215