Interfacial Engineering of Soft Matter Substrates by Solid-State Polymer Adsorption

Wenyang Xu*, Oliver Werzer, Panagiotis Spiliopoulos, Karl Mihhels, Qixiang Jiang, Zhuojun Meng, Han Tao, Roland Resel, Tekla Tammelin, Torbjörn Pettersson, Eero Kontturi*

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleScientificpeer-review

Abstract

Polymer coating to substrates alters surface chemistry and imparts bulk material functionalities with a minute thickness, even in nanoscale. Specific surface modification of a substate usually requires an active substrate that, e.g., undergoes a chemical reaction with the modifying species. Here, we present a generic method for surface modification, namely, solid-state adsorption, occurring purely by entropic strive. Formed by heating above the melting point or glass transition and subsequent rinsing of the excess polymer, the emerging ultrathin (<10 nm) layers are known in fundamental polymer physics but have never been utilized as building blocks for materials and they have never been explored on soft matter substrates. We show with model surfaces as well as bulk substrates, how solid-state adsorption of common polymers, such as polystyrene and poly(lactic acid), can be applied on soft, cellulose-based substrates. Our study showcases the versatility of solid-state adsorption across various polymer/substrate systems. Specifically, we achieve proof-of-concept hydrophobization on flexible cellulosic substrates, maintaining irreversible and miniscule adsorption yet with nearly 100% coverage without compromising the bulk material properties. The method can be considered generic for all polymers whose Tg and Tm are below those of the to-be-coated adsorbed layer, and whose integrity can withstand the solvent leaching conditions. Its full potential has broad implications for diverse materials systems where surface coatings play an important role, such as packaging, foldable electronics, or membrane technology.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)32874–32885
JournalACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Volume16
Issue number25
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2024
MoE publication typeA1 Journal article-refereed

Funding

Prof. Pekka Peljo is thanked for helping with the contact angle measurements. M.Sc. Panu Lahtinen, M.Sc. Vesa Kunnari, M.Sc. Timo Kaljunen and Katja Petterson (VTT, Finland) are thanked for production and characterization of CNF and CNF films/nanopapers. Dr. Wenchao Xiang (Aalto, Finland) is acknowledged for assisting TMSC preparation. Dr. Feng Chen (Aalto, Finland) is thanked for demonstrating nanopaper characterizations. Dr. Leena-Sisko Johansson (Aalto, Finland) and Dr. Katri Kontturi (VTT, Finland) are thanked for conducting XPS analyses and data interpretation. Sakari Lepikko (M.Sc.) is thanked for helping with the ellipsometry analyses. Jarkko Etula (M.Sc.) and Heli Seppa\u0308nen (M.Sc.) are thanked for helpful discussions on XRR data fitting. W.X., T.P., and E.K. acknowledge the funding from Tandem Forest Values. Furthermore, W.X. also acknowledges the funding support from Academy of Finland (Grant decision no.349109). This work made use of Aalto University Bioeconomy, and RawMatters Facilities. We also acknowledge the provision of facilities and technical support by Aalto University at OtaNano Nanomicroscopy Centre (Aalto-NMC). The work is a part of the Academy of Finland\u2019s Flagship Programme (Competence Centre for Materials Bioeconomy, FinnCERES).

Keywords

  • cellulose
  • Guiselin layer
  • nanolayer adsorption
  • soft matter
  • solid-state adsorption
  • surface chemistry

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