Macromolecules, Vol.50, No.8, 3301-3312, 2017
A Journey along the Extruder with Polystyrene:C-60 Nanocomposites: Convergence of Feeding Formulations into a Similar Nanomorphology
We investigated the effect of the feeding formulation (premixed powders of pure components versus solvent-blended mixture) of polystyrene-C-60 composites on the dispersion and reagglomeration phenomena developing along the barrel of a twin-screw extruder. The dispersion of C-60 in the PS matrix is studied over different length scales using a combination of optical microscopy, spin-echo small-angle neutron scattering (SESANS), small-angle neutron scattering (SANS), small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS). When a solvent-blended mixture is used as the feeding formulation, the inlet material contains essentially molecularly dispersed C-60 as revealed by the nanodomains with very small phase contrast. However, C-60 reagglomeration occurs along the extruder, creating a morphology still containing only nanodomains but with much higher phase contrast. In the case of mixed powders, the material evolves from the initial macroscopic mixture of pure polystyrene and C-60 into a composite simultaneously containing micro- and nanoaggregates of C-60 as well as C-60 molecularly dispersed in the matrix. Our results show that the two different initial feeding formulations with widely different initial morphologies converge along the extruder, through opposite morphological pathways, into a similar final nanomorphology which is dictated by the interplay between the thermodynamics of the system and the flow. Correlations between the morphological evolution along the extruder and the thermorheological properties of the composites are identified.