Polymer, Vol.53, No.18, 4002-4009, 2012
Enthalpy recovery and structural relaxation in layered glassy polymer films
Recent studies of physical aging in confined polymer glasses have revealed that aging behavior in confinement often differs from bulk behavior. This study used DSC to characterize physical aging and structural relaxation in bulk polysulfone (PSF) and co-extruded multilayered films of PSF and an olefin block copolymer (OBC) that have average PSF layer thicknesses of 640 nm, 260 nm, and 185 nm. The films were aged isothermally at 170 degrees C, and the recovered enthalpy upon reheating was measured over time. The films with 640 nm and 260 nm PSF layers had aging rates very similar to that of bulk PSF, while the film with 185 nm PSF layers had an aging rate slightly greater than the bulk value. The cooling rate dependence of the limiting fictive temperature (T-f') in multilayered and bulk PSF samples was also characterized. Values of T-f' were similar for all films at each cooling rate. The results of this work are in general agreement with our previous gas permeation aging study of multilayered PSF films aged at 35 degrees C, in which the effect of layer thickness on aging behavior was minimal. This stands in contrast to studies with thin, freestanding PSF films, which exhibit accelerated aging relative to bulk and have aging rates that depend strongly on film thickness. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.