| Literature DB >> 30856293 |
Fei Wang1, Patrick Altschuh1,2, Lorenz Ratke3, Haodong Zhang1, Michael Selzer1,2, Britta Nestler1,2.
Abstract
Polymeric porous media (PPM) are widely used as advanced materials, such as sound dampening foams, lithium-ion batteries, stretchable sensors, and biofilters. The functionality, reliability, and durability of these materials have a strong dependence on the microstructural patterns of PPM. One underlying mechanism for the formation of porosity in PPM is phase separation, which engenders polymer-rich and polymer-poor (pore) phases. Herein, the phase separation in polymer solutions is discussed from two different aspects: diffusion and hydrodynamic effects. For phase separation governed by diffusion, two novel morphological transitions are reviewed: "cluster-to-percolation" and "percolation-to-droplets," which are attributed to an effect that the polymer-rich and the solvent-rich phases reach the equilibrium states asynchronously. In the case dictated by hydrodynamics, a deterministic nature for the microstructural evolution during phase separation is scrutinized. The deterministic nature is caused by an interfacial-tension-gradient (solutal Marangoni force), which can lead to directional movement of droplets as well as hydrodynamic instabilities during phase separation.Entities:
Keywords: capillarity; phase separation; phase-field; polymer solutions; principal component analysis (PCA)
Year: 2019 PMID: 30856293 DOI: 10.1002/adma.201806733
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Mater ISSN: 0935-9648 Impact factor: 30.849