화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part A: Polymer Chemistry, Vol.34, No.14, 2867-2877, 1996
High T-G Polyimide Nanofoams Derived from Pyromellitic Dianhydride and 1,1-bis(4-Aminophenyl)-1-Phenyl-2,2,2-Trifluoroethane
New routes for the synthesis of high T-g thermally stable polymer foams with pore sizes in the nanometer regime have been developed. Foams were prepared by casting well-defined microphase-separated block copolymers comprised of a thermally stable block and a thermally labile material. At properly designed volume fractions the morphology provides a matrix of the thermally stable material with the thermally labile material as the dispersed phase. Upon thermal treatment, the thermally unstable block undergoes thermolysis generating pores, the size and shape of which are dictated by the initial copolymer morphology. Triblock copolymers comprised of a high T-g, amorphous polyimide matrix with poly(propylene oxide) as the thermally decomposable coblock, were prepared. The copolymer synthesis was conducted through the poly(amic acid) precursor and subsequent cyclodehydration to the polyimide by either thermal or chemical means. Dynamic mechanical analysis confirmed microphase separated morphologies for all copolymers, irrespective of the propylene oxide block lengths investigated. Upon decomposition of the thermally labile coblock, a 9-18% reduction in density was observed, consistent with the generation of a foam which was stable to 400 degrees C.