Web Release Date: December 29,
Use of Infrared Spectroscopy To Characterize Clay Intercalation and Exfoliation in Polymer Nanocomposites
National Research Council Canada, Industrial Materials Institute, 75 De Mortagne Blvd., Boucherville, Quebec, Canada J4B 6Y4
Received December 11, 2006
Revised Manuscript Received November 19, 2007

Abstract:
The use of infrared spectroscopy as a technique for characterizing the state of intercalation and exfoliation in polymer nanocomposites prepared from montmorillonite-based nanoclays was investigated. The nanocomposite samples were based on polypropylene (blown films) or high-density polyethylene (extruded material). It was clearly shown that the shape of the clay band envelope in the 1350-750 cm-1 region, which includes four Si-O stretching modes, varies with the degree of processing and is sensitive to the quality of intercalation/exfoliation. Peak fitting was used to elucidate the nature of the changes and to develop quantitative indicators. The out-of-plane Si-O mode near 1070 cm-1 is particularly sensitive and undergoes significant changes. Infrared spectroscopy is a valuable complement to established techniques like X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscopy and has the added advantage of being able to provide a relatively fast indication of the overall degree of intercalation/exfoliation, including clay particles with interlayer spacings outside the range of X-ray diffraction. Furthermore, it offers the possibility of use as a quality control method, either in the laboratory or on-line.
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