Chem. J. Chinese Universities ›› 2016, Vol. 37 ›› Issue (4): 767.doi: 10.7503/cjcu20150856

• Polymer Chemistry • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Tuning of Ionic Interaction and Rheological Properties of Nanoscale Ionic Materials

LIU Yangjian1, RUAN Yingbo2, ZHANG Baoqing2,*(), QIAO Xin2, LIU Chenyang2,*()   

  1. 1. School of Chemistry and Biological Engineering, University of Science and Technology Beijing, Beijing 100083, China
    2. Key Laboratory of Engineering Plastics of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Institute of Chemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190, China
  • Received:2015-11-08 Online:2016-04-10 Published:2016-03-22
  • Contact: ZHANG Baoqing,LIU Chenyang E-mail:zhangbq@iccas.ac.cn;liucy@iccas.ac.cn
  • Supported by:
    † Supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(No.51103162)

Abstract:

We prepared two kinds of silica-based nanoscale ionic materials(NIMs) with increasing SiO2 contents, and also with different relative ionic interaction strengths between their constituents(SiO2-SIT-M2070>SiO2-SIT-Ethomeen for the relative ionic interaction strength). The results of transmission electron microscope(TEM) and small-angle X-ray scattering(SAXS) investigations indicated that there was no obvious nano-particle aggregate in both kinds of NIMs. The differential scanning calorimetry(DSC) results showed that the ionic interactions prohibited the crystallization of out-shell block copolymers in the prepared NIMs. Moreover, the crystallization suppression was more serious with increasing the ionic interaction strength. Ionic interaction also displayed the dramatic influence on the dynamic rheological behavior of as-prepared NIMs. The dynamic shear moduli and viscosities of SiO2-SIT-Ethomeen were about 1—3 orders of magnitude lower than those of SiO2-SIT-M2070 with the same solid contents. Under the shear of large dynamic strain, SiO2-SIT-M2070 with the relatively high solid contents showed the soft glass rheological properties, while SiO2-SIT-Ethomeen showed the phenomenon of strong strain overshoot. Furthermore, the strain that corresponding with the maximum of dynamic shear moduli and viscosities gradually decreased with the increasing of solid contents, and so did the degree of overshoot. All above results suggested that the rheological properties of NIMs could be effectively controlled by carefully tuning the ionic interactions between their constituents.

Key words: Nanoscale ionic material, Ionic interaction, Rheological property, Strain overshoot

CLC Number: 

TrendMD: