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1.
Langmuir ; 35(38): 12418-12427, 2019 Sep 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31461288

RESUMO

The film formation of acrylic latex dispersions, containing different amounts of carboxylic acid functional groups by the incorporation of methacrylic acid (MAA), was studied with GARField 1H NMR at various relative humidities (RH). Polymer particles with glass-transition temperatures in the range from 26 to 50 °C formed films at room temperature because of hydroplasticization. It was found that with an increased drying rate due to lower RH, the evaporation flux of water was limited by the latex polymer. Only in the second stage of drying this phenomenon was more obvious with increasing MAA content. 1H NMR relaxometry was used to study the change of hydrogen mobilities during film formation and hardening of the films. This showed that the drying rate itself had no impact on the hydrogen mobility in the latex films as measured via the T2 relaxation time. Hydrogen mobilities of water and the mobile polymer phase only significantly decrease after most water has evaporated. This implies that the rigidity of the polymers increases with the evaporation of water that otherwise plasticizes the polymer through hydrogen bonding with the carboxylic acid groups. This hardening of the polymer phase is essential for applications in a coating. The hydrogen mobilities were affected by the MAA concentration. Densities of mobile hydrogens increase with increasing MAA content. This is expected if the mobile protons are contained in the MAA groups. The result thus confirms the role of carboxylic acid groups in hydrogen bonding and plasticization of the copolymers. Hydrogen mobilities, however, decrease with increasing MAA content, which is hypothesized to be caused by the formation of dimers of carboxylic acid groups that still hold water. They still enable short-range polymer hydrogen mobility due to hydroplasticization but limit long-range polymer mobility due to interaction between the carboxylic acid groups.

2.
J Magn Reson ; 214(1): 227-36, 2012 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22169437

RESUMO

High spatial resolution NMR imaging techniques have been developed recently to measure the spatial inhomogeneity of a polymer coating film. However, the substrates of the polymer coatings for such experiments are generally required to be non-metallic, because metals can interact with static magnetic fields B(0) and RF fields B(1) giving rise to artifacts in NMR images. In this paper we present a systematic study on the effects of metallic substrates on 1D profiles obtained by high resolution NMR imaging. The off-resonance effect is discussed in detail in terms of the excitation profile of the RF pulses. We quantitatively show how the NMR signal intensities change with frequency offset at different RF pulse lengths. The complete NMR profiles were simulated using a Finite Element Analysis method by fully considering the inhomogeneities in both B(1) and B(0). The excellent agreement between the calculated and measured NMR profiles on both metallic and non-metallic substrates indicates that the experimental NMR profiles can be reproduced very well by numerical simulations. The metallic substrates can disturb the RF field of the coil by eddy current effect and therefore change the NMR profiles. To quantitatively interpret the NMR profile of a polymer layer on a metallic substrate, the profile has to be divided by the profile of a reference on the same metallic substrate located at the same distance from the coil.


Assuntos
Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética/métodos , Metais/química , Polímeros/análise , Polímeros/química
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