Thursday, November 12, 2009: 12:30 PM
Tennessee D (Gaylord Opryland Hotel)
Description:
This session is dedicated to investigations of the chemistry, structure, morphology, and properties of polymeric materials in interfacial regions. It is well understood that the interfacial properties of a material can be significantly different than the bulk properties. Understanding these interfacial regions is becoming increasingly important as the trend towards miniaturization and integration continues, leading to devices with an increasing number of interfaces and complex material formulations. Device performance is often dictated by the interfacial properties of a material. Examples include organic electronics which rely on a well organized dielectric layers, micro-electro-mechanical systems (MEMS) which rely on a thin lubricant layer to prevent adhesion, integrated circuits which rely on well controlled patterning of organic films, or biological systems which rely on interfacial regions to govern transport of critical molecules. Theoretical, computational, and experimental papers are welcome on polymeric interfacial properties as well as research investigating emerging technologies through the exploitation of polymeric interfacial phenomena.
Sponsor:
Polymers
Co-Sponsor(s):
Thermodynamics and Transport Properties (01a)
Chair:
Co-Chair:
12:30 PM
(581a)
Novel Characterization of Relative "Stiffness" and Its Distribution Across Nanoconfined Polymer Films Using Rigidochromic Fluorescence
1:30 PM
(581d)
Real-Time Study of Polymer Thin Film Patterning Induced by Electric Fields Using a New SFA Technique
1:50 PM
(581e)
Ellipsometry Measurements of Glass Transition Breadth in Gradient, Block and Random Copolymer Bulk and Thin Films
See more of this Group/Topical: Materials Engineering and Sciences Division