Polymer, Vol.54, No.23, 6399-6405, 2013
Entropic effects in carbon nanotubes-templated crystallization of Poly(3-alkyl thiophenes, P3HT, P3OT)
A significant increase in polymer crystallinity is reported in composites of carbon-nanotubes (CNT) and Poly(3-octylthiophene-2,5-diyl), P3HT and Poly(3-octylthiophene-2,5-diyl), P3OT; Differential scanning calorimetly (DSC) reveal an increase from about 40% crystallinity of the native P3HT to similar to 62% in composites containing 25 wt% MWNT. A similar behavior is observed in P3OT with similar to 68% crystallinity, a double crystallization peak and higher melting temperature than the native polymers. The effect is unique to CNT and is not induced by fullerenes or graphene layers. High-resolution transmission electron microscopy, (HRTEM) of CNT-polymer dispersions reveal chains stacked upon the CNT in an elongated, stretched conformation. Following a detailed molecular study by Bernardi et al. and the HRTEM observations the DSC results are attributed to a CNT-mediated entropic effect: due to their intrinsic, 1D cylindrical shape the CNT impose an increased conjugation length on chains adsorbed and stacked upon dispersed CNT. Crystallization thus commences from a heterogeneous mixture of native chains and chains with a longer persistence length (higher effective rigidity) and consequentially a lower effective height of the entropic barrier for crystallization. The findings offer a new insight into the origins of CNTinduced polymer nucleation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.