| Literature DB >> 31497074 |
Martin Tazreiter1, Paul Christian1, Robert Schennach1, Thomas Grießer2, Anna Maria Coclite1.
Abstract
The chemical composition of a copolymer drives many important material properties and quantification in terms of comonomer volume fraction is thus of practical relevance for many studies. Infrared spectroscopy is one of the most common techniques for compositional analysis but it usually relies on manual evaluation of baselines and peak heights, which can be rather inaccurate and become a laborious task when having multiple spectra to evaluate. On the contrary, Maxwell's theory of electrodynamics can be used to calculate the complex index of refraction from measured spectra promising a more accurate quantification. Since this procedure is rather involved, we propose a simple in-house developed IR-quantification routine to automatically evaluate the comonomer volume fractions of thin copolymer films by using the Bouguer-Lambert-Beer approximation after correcting the baseline of all absorbance spectra automatically. This method was experimentally evaluated on over 40 thin polymeric coatings synthesized by initiated chemical vapor deposition on silicon substrates. The samples comprised a wide range of different compositions and were synthesized from four different monomers, with single films consisting of up to three components. All data obtained by our routine was compared with data from spectroscopic ellipsometry and with X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy data of selected samples. The comparisons show that the IR-quantification routine reliably evaluated the polymer composition even when the involved comonomers exhibited similar chemistry, as it is the case for methacrylic acid cross-linked with ethylene glycol dimethacrylate.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 31497074 PMCID: PMC6688560 DOI: 10.1039/c7ay01748k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Anal Methods ISSN: 1759-9660 Impact factor: 2.896
Fig. 1Schematic representation of a copolymer film on a substrate (left) and the model system used to describe the infrared absorbance of such a system (right). The polymer film is treated as a stack of homopolymer layers (one for each comonomer), with the layer thicknesses corresponding to the respective volume fractions.
Fig. 2Experimental baseline-uncorrected absorbance spectra normalized by thickness of the homopolymers p-EGDMA (a) and p-MAA (b). The baseline, as estimated from asymmetric least squares (described in the text), is shown in red.
Fig. 3Exemplary fittings of copolymer absorbance spectra. p-MAA–EGDMA (a), p-PFDA–EGDMA (b) and p-MAA–EGDMA–HEMA (c).
Fig. 4Thickness value comparison for all samples measured with FTIR and ellipsometry. The estimated error from the FTIR fitting method is shown, whereas the error of the ellipsometry measurements of about 1% is not shown (a). A histogram of the relative deviation of the FTIR value from the ellipsometry value is shown in (b).