Article
pubs.acs.org/IECR
Solid-State Foaming of Cyclic Olefin Copolymer by Carbon Dioxide
Zhenhua Chen,†,‡ Changchun Zeng,*,†,‡ Zhen Yao,*,∥ and Kun Cao§,∥
†
High Performance Materials Institute, Florida State University, Tallahassee, Florida 32310, United States
Department of Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering, FAMU-FSU College of Engineering, Florida State University, 2525
Pottsdamer Street, Tallahassee, Florida 32310, United States
§
State Key Laboratory of Chemical Engineering, Zhejiang University, Hangzhou 310017, China
∥
Institute of Polymerization and Polymer Engineering, Department of Chemical and Biological Engineering, Zhejiang University,
Hangzhou 310017, China
‡
ABSTRACT: Solid-state foaming of cyclic olefin copolymer (COC, Topas 6017) using carbon dioxide (CO2) was investigated.
Before the foaming experiment, the solubility of CO2 in the polymer at various saturation pressure (5−10 MPa) and saturation
temperature (40 °C) was measured using the ex-situ gravimetric method. The effects of the saturation pressure, foaming
temperature, and foaming time on the foam structure were systematically investigated. Ultramicrocelluar foams with a cell size of
0.5 μm and cell density over 1012 cells/cm3 were successfully prepared. Moreover, it was observed that the system, which was
strongly plasticized by CO2, would transition from foaming to crazing under certain conditions. The phenomenon was examined
in detail and understood by a proposed mechanism that accounts for both homogeneous nucleation and stress fields induced
crazing.
an increase in both the effective yield strain and the elongation
at the break of the polymers, which are beneficial for bubble
nucleation and growth. The solid-state foaming process has
been used to prepare microcellular foams from a number of
amorphous and semicrystalline polymers, such as poly(vinyl
chloride),15 polystyrene,16 polycarbonate,14 poly(acrylonitrile−
butadiene−styrene),17 poly(methyl methacrylate),4 poly(ethylene terephthalate),18 polyetherimide,19,20 poly(ether
sulfone),10,19,21 and poly(aryl ether ketone),22 etc.
One of the key processes to determine the cellular structure
is the nucleation and growth of gas bubbles. The resulting
structure depends on a balance between several mechanisms,
such as the gas solubility and plasticization effect, gas diffusion,
and the momentum and thermal transfer in the polymer, which
depend inherently on the polymer and process conditions.23
Cell nucleation phenomena in microcellular foaming have
been primarily studied by applying classical nucleation
theory.24−26 A different mechanism was proposed by Holl et
al.27 in solid-state foaming, in which cell nucleation is caused by
a triaxial tensile failure mechanism which is similar to the
explosive decompression failure observed in elastomers used
under high-pressure environments.28
Cycloolefine copolymers (COCs) are a family of amorphous
copolymers of ethylene (E) and norbornene (NB) with varying
E/NB ratios, which largely determines their mechanical and
thermomechanical properties. For example, a higher norbornene fraction in the COC would result in a polymer with a
higher glass transition temperature (Tg). COCs are a relatively
new thermoplastic with many excellent properties such as good
1. INTRODUCTION
Microcellular foams were initially developed by Martini and coworkers at MIT1 using inert gases (carbon dioxide and/or
nitrogen) as the physical-blowing agents. Generally, these foam
materials are characterized by a cell density higher than 109
cells/cm3 and a cell size of 10 μm or less. They have attracted a
great deal of interest in the past few decades due to their unique
capability of offering a new range of insulating and mechanical
properties with concurrent reduction in materials weight and
cost.2,3 Microcellular polymers have been shown to possess
high impact strength,4−6 high toughness,7 high stiffness-toweight ratio,4,5 high thermal stability,8 and low thermal
conductivity9 when compared to their unfoamed counterparts.
As a result, they have been increasingly used in a variety of
applications for food packaging, insulation, filtration membrane,
sports equipment, automobiles, aircraft parts, etc.
Several techniques have been developed to prepare microcellular foams by physical foaming using gases in their
supercritical or subcritical states.10−13 These techniques are
based on the following common principles: (1) dissolution of
gas in a polymer to form a polymer−gas solution; (2)
quenching of the polymer−gas solution into a supersaturated
state by either reducing pressure (pressure quenching method)
or increasing temperature (temperature jumping method); (3)
nucleation and growth of gas bubbles till the thermodynamic
and/or mass transport driving forces vanish. Both pressure
quenching and temperature jump methods take advantage of
the plasticization effect of the dissolved gas, which depresses
the intrinsic glass transition temperature (Tg) of the polymer. If
the plasticizing effect and Tg depression are prominent, foaming
may take place at temperatures below the normal glass
transition temperature of the polymer, leading to a solid-state
foaming process.14 During the process, the plasticization effect
also causes a significant reduction in the Young’s modulus and
© XXXX American Chemical Society
Received: March 14, 2013
Revised: June 8, 2013
Accepted: June 13, 2013
A
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a function of time. Sample transfer was completed as quickly as
possible (∼40 s after opening the relief valve) to minimize gas
loss before measurement.
2.3. Solid-State Foaming. COC sample was saturated for
28 h with CO2 under designated pressure and temperature
using the same apparatus for gas solubility measurements. From
the solubility study it was determined that under the chosen
saturation time equilibrium was reached in all experiments.
Following rapid release of the pressure, the sample was
removed from the pressure vessel and quickly transferred (<1
min) to an ethylene glycol oil bath for foaming. Foaming time
was kept constant at 30 s unless otherwise indicated. The
foamed sample was then quenched in an ice/water mixture to
fix the foam morphology.
2.4. Foam Characterization. The foam cell morphology
was observed with a JEOL (JSM-7401 F) scanning electron
microscope (SEM). Samples were freeze fractured in liquid
nitrogen to expose the cross-sectional cellular structure before
being mounted on stubs and sputter coated with Au/Pd.
Images were acquired at an accelerating voltage of 10 kV. To
obtain the average cell size and cell density, image analysis of
the SEM micrographs was conducted using Image J (National
Institutes of Health). Cell diameter was obtained by calculating
the average cell diameter of at least 100 cells in the SEM
micrographs. Cell density (Nf), number of cells per cubic
centimeter of foam, was determined from eq 140
mechanical properties, high transparency, high glass-transition
temperatures, high thermal stability, low dielectric constants
and dielectric loss, excellent chemical resistance, low moisture
uptake, and good barrier properties.29 Because of this unique
combination of properties, COCs are being explored as
materials for various applications, e.g., optical data storage,
lenses, packaging, medical equipment, etc.30,31 In addition to
these applications which take advantage of the excellent
transparency of COCs, there are many other actual or potential
uses of COCs, such as housings, gears, powder coatings, toner
binder resin, and filter media for air and other gases.31,32
Moreover, the combination of excellent mechanical and
thermal properties make them viable alternatives to polyolefin.
To date, a few studies have shown that carbon dioxide has
substantial solubility10,33 and a strong plasticization effect10 in
several COCs. The feasibility of preparing COC foams using
carbon dioxide has been demonstrated.10,33−37 However,
systematic investigation of the processing−morphology relationship of CO2 foaming of COCs is generally lacking.
Moreover, the foaming behavior of COCs with very high
norbornene content, which is important in thermally
demanding applications, has not been studied. Inspired by
the excellent foamability of other amorphous high Tg polymers
such as polyetherimide,19,20 polysulfone,19 and fluorinated poly
(aryl ether)38 from which even nanocellular structure can be
obtained by the solid-state foaming process, COC microcellular
foaming by the solid-state foaming was systematically
investigated in this work using a COC polymer with a high
norbornene content and glass transition temperature (180 °C).
The effects of process parameters such as saturation pressure,
foaming temperature and foaming time on the microstructure
and morphology of foams were systematically studied. An
“unusual” phenomenon was revealed and analyzed in detail,
where the increase of saturation pressure was detrimental to
solid-state foaming. The phenomenon, while seemingly
inconsistent with the classical nucleation theory, can be readily
understood by a new mechanism proposed in the study.
⎛ nM2 ⎞3/2
Nf = ⎜
⎟
⎝ A ⎠
(1)
where n is the number of cells in the SEM micrograph, M the
magnification factor, and A the area of the micrograph (cm2).
3. RESULTS AND DISCUSSION
3.1. Solubility of CO2 in COC. CO2 solubility was
measured by the desorption experiments described earlier. In
this work, the saturation temperature was fixed at 40 °C. This
temperature, which is slightly higher than the critical temperature of the CO2 (Tc = 31 °C), was deliberately selected to
avoid potential issues associated with CO2 liquification at high
saturation pressure. Moreover, compared to the slow sorption
process at room temperature (∼25 °C) that is common for
solid-state foaming,14,20 CO2 sorption was greatly expedited
because of the vastly increased diffusion rate enabled by the
higher temperature and converting CO2 into supercritical
state.41
The dissolved CO2 per unit weight of polymer (Mgas) was
determined from the weights of the polymer−CO2 sample at
different desorption times and the initial polymer. Values were
plotted versus the square root of desorption time as shown in
Figure 1. A good linear relationship was observed, indicating
the desorption process can be adequately described by Fickian
diffusion.42 In addition, the solubility of CO2 in the samples can
be obtained by linearly extrapolating the desorption curve to
zero desorption time according to the one-dimensional Fickian
diffusion equation42
2. EXPERIMENTAL SECTION
2.1. Materials. The COC sheets used in the study (Topas
6017) with a thickness of 1 mm were kindly supplied by the
manufacturer (TOPAS Advanced Polymers Inc.). The polymer
has a density of 1.02 g/cm3 and a glass transition temperature
of 180 °C. Sheets were cut into specimens of size 10 mm ×25
mm and dried in a vacuum oven for 24 h before use. Bone dry
grade carbon dioxide (i.e., 99.9% purity) was purchase from
Airgas Inc. and used as received.
2.2. Solubility Measurements. To determine the
equilibrium solubility of CO2 in the COC, desorption
experiments were performed using an ex-situ gravimetric
method (mass-loss analysis).39 The COC specimen was placed
in a high-pressure vessel and evacuated. The vessel was
immersed in a thermostat by which the saturation temperature
was controlled (ECO-E20G, LAUDA). CO2 was then delivered
into the pressure vessel using a high-pressure syringe pump
(260D, Teledyne ISCO) to reach the designated saturation
pressure. The saturation pressure was controlled (by the pump)
with 0.5% full-scale accuracy, and the saturation temperature
was controlled (by the thermostat) with an accuracy of ±0.01
°C. After a prespecified sorption time, pressure was released
and the saturated COC sample was rapidly removed and
transferred to a semimicroanalytical balance (CPA225D
Sartorius; precision, 0.01 mg) to record the sample weight as
⎛ Dt ⎞1/2
Mgas = M∞ − 4⎜ 2 ⎟ M∞
⎝ πL ⎠
(2)
where Mgas is the mass of residual gas in the polymer sample,
M∞ is the mass uptake at the experimental saturation time, t is
B
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model (eq 3), which has been extensively studied and widely
used to describe the sorption of gases in glassy polymers43
C = KDPS +
C H′ bPS
1 + bPS
(3)
where C is the equilibrium gas solubility, KD is Herny’s gas
dissolution constant, PS is the gas saturation pressure, C′H is the
capacity constant for Langmuir mode sites, and b is the affinity
constant for the Langmuir mode adsorption. At high gas
saturation pressure, eq 3 can be simplified to
C = KDPS +
C H′ bPS
C′ b
= KDPS + 1 H ≈ KDPS + C H′
1 + bPS
+b
P
s
(4)
Thus, for saturation processes occurring at high pressure, the
dual-mode sorption model predicts a linear relationship
between the saturation pressure and the equilibrium gas
solubility, which was observed in the current study. From the
zero pressure intercept and slope of the fitting line in Figure 3,
CH′ and KD were estimated to be 0.029 (g of gas/g of polymer)
and 0.0074 (g of gas/g of polymer/MPa).
3.2. Foaming Process and Foam Structure. The COCs
were foamed under a broad range of saturation and foaming
conditions to investigate the effects of typical processing
parameters on the foam structure. Specifically, the influence of
foaming time, foaming temperature, and saturation pressure
was studied in detail.
3.2.1. Effect of Foaming Time. Foaming was conducted at a
series of times using a foaming temperature of 170 °C. Prior to
foaming all samples were saturated at 7 MPa. Note that even
though the foaming temperature is lower than the glass
transition temperature of the COC polymer, the polymer was
heavily plasticized by the saturated CO2 and foaming readily
proceeded. Cellular structures of the foams were examined by
SEM and are shown in Figure 3. At short foaming time (10 s),
the foam bubbles appeared round in shape and were largely
isolated from each other. As foaming time increased and foam
cell grew, the cell size increased and the foam cells started to
impinge against each other. This was accompanied by the
change of the cell shapes, from initial spherical shape to
polygonal and elongated polygonal that was oriented along the
thickness direction of the foam. At prolonged foaming time, the
cell interference became more severe and extensive rupture of
cell walls was observed. This may be attributed to the low
stiffness of the polymer matrix at the high temperature and high
gas concentration and, thus, failure to resist tensile deformation
of the cell wall when a relatively long foaming time was applied.
This will be discussed in more detail later.
Cell size and cell density of the foams were analyzed by
image analysis and are summarized in Figure 4. Ultramicrocellular foam with a cell size of 0.5 μm and cell density
of 1.4 × 1012 cells/cm3 was prepared using a foaming time of 10
s. Increasing foaming time led to an increase of cell size and
concomitant decrease of cell density, resulting from cell growth
and coalescence. As foaming proceeds, the dissolved gas was
depleted by bubble growth and diffusion out of the matrix. Both
led to the reduction of gas concentration and concentration
gradient and hence the decrease of bubble growth. Meanwhile,
the matrix stiffened as a result of gas depletion and increase of
the system Tg and matrix modulus. Eventually the system selfvitrified and foam morphology was frozen. In the present study
after 50 s of foaming both cell size and cell density appeared to
Figure 1. Desorption CO2 from COC6017 after being saturated for 28
h at 40 °C and 10 MPa.
the desorption time, and D and L are the diffusion coefficient
and specimen thickness, respectively.
To determine the saturation time necessary to achieve
equilibrium sorption, CO2 solubility was measured under a
series of saturation times for pressures ranging from 5 to 10
MPa. In all cases the solubility increased asymptotically with
increasing saturation time, and 28 h was sufficient for the
systems to reach equilibrium. This saturation time was hence
used for all foaming experiments to ensure the homogeneity of
the cellular structures of the foams prepared, as the
concentration gradient from nonequilibrium sorption can lead
to graded cell size and density.41
Figure 2 shows the equilibrium solubility of CO2 in the COC
as a function of saturation pressure at 40 °C. The solubility
Figure 2. Equilibrium CO2 solubility in COC6017 as a function of
saturation pressure at 40 °C.
increased linearly with increasing saturation pressure, consistent
with other reports.43
The linear relationship between the solubility and the
saturation pressure observed in Figure 2 implies that the
sorption behavior may be modeled by the dual-mode sorption
C
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Figure 3. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 7 MPa and foamed at 170 °C for various foaming times: 10 (a), 30 (b), 50 (c), 70 (d), 110 (e), and
170 s (f).
have reached the plateau values, ∼1 μm and ∼6 × 1011 cells/
cm3, respectively. Further extending the foaming time did not
impact the cell size and cell density. The seemingly minute
change in cell size and cell density after 70 s is most likely due
to variation associated with image analysis and calculation.
3.2.2. Effect of Foaming Temperature. Foaming temperature has a profound influence on cell morphology because it
affects both cell nucleation and growth. Thus, samples were
foamed at a series of temperatures (120−180 °C) using
samples saturated at 5, 6, and 7 MPa. Cell size and cell density
were analyzed and are shown in Figure 5. In all cases, cell size
increases with increasing temperature. This is consistent with
the fact that higher temperatures accelerate cell growth because
of the combined effects of higher gas diffusivity and lower
D
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Figure 4. Average foam cell diameter (left) and cell density (right) as a function of foaming time; saturation pressure and foaming temperature were
7 MPa and 170 °C, respectively.
Figure 5. Average foam cell diameter (left) and cell density (right) as a function of foaming temperature at different saturation pressures.
which decreases as temperature increases. Higher temperature
thus has two opposite effects on the cell nucleation rate. On
one hand, it facilitates the increase of nucleation by greatly
enhancing the exponential term; on the other hand, it may
reduce the nucleation rate because of the reduction in available
gas. More importantly, as a result of the increased gas diffusivity
and lower polymer viscosity at higher temperatures, cell growth
becomes more prominent. As both nucleation and growth
compete for available gas, nucleation is further suppressed.
Therefore, the observed temperature dependency of cell
density is a result of the convoluted effects associated with
temperature. It can argued that below Tmax at which the
maximum of the cell density was achieved the nucleation
enhancement effect was more prevalent and hence the increase
of cell density. At temperatures higher than Tmax the situation
was reversed and the suppression effect prevailed, resulting in
the decrease of cell density. Furthermore, the cell coalescence at
higher temperature was more prominent, which may also
contribute to the decrease of cell density and increase of cell
size.
stiffness of the polymer−gas mixture. On the other hand, with
increasing temperature the cell density first increased to reach a
maximum value and then decreased thereafter. Kumar et al.44
and Krause et al.10 observed a similar behavior in their studies
of foaming of several polymers. The phenomenon can be
readily understood by the competing effects of temperature on
cell nucleation and competition (for gas) between nucleation
and growth of bubbles.
Classical nucleation theory45,46 was widely used in foaming
to illustrate experimental phenomena due to its simplicity.
According to classical nucleation theory, the homogeneous
nucleation rate is expressed as
* /kT )
Nhom = f0 C0exp( −ΔG hom
(5)
where f 0 is the frequency factor representing the frequency that
gas molecules join the embryo nucleus, C0 is the concentration
of the gas molecules which decreases with increasing
temperature, and T is the foaming temperature. The
homogeneous nucleation free energy ΔGhom
* ∝ γ3bp, where γbp
is the interfacial tension at the gas bubble polymer interface
E
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Figure 6. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 5 MPa and foamed at 120 (a), 130 (b), 140 (c), 150 (d), 160 (e), and 170 °C (f).
Samples were saturated at higher pressures (6 and 7 MPa)
and foamed over the same temperature range, and cell size and
cell density were again analyzed and are shown in Figure 5. For
both pressures, the temperature dependencies of cell size and
cell density followed a similar trend observed previously, but
they were significantly less sensitive to the temperature
increase. Weller et al.14 observed similar phenomena in their
study of solid-state foaming of polycarbonate. In their study the
cell density under high saturation pressure was independent of
temperature. They suggested that unlike foaming in a polymer
melt where the temperature dependency of the cell nucleation
rate followed the Arrhenius relationship, cell nucleation in
solid-state foaming was fundamentally different. Under high
saturation pressure the rate would reach a plateau value solely
dependent on pressure. The stronger temperature dependency
of cell size at lower pressure was also observed in their study
and explained from the standpoint of bubble growth. To
maintain the bubble of a certain size, a pressure differential
between the growing bubble and the surrounding polymer−gas
mixture is necessary, whose value was proportional to 1/r
F
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Figure 7. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 7 MPa and foamed at 120 (a), 130 (b), 140 (c), 150 (d), 160 (e), and 170 °C (f).
bubble size would be smaller due to the higher required
pressure differential. In summary, our study on the temperature
effects on the cell morphology in solid-state foaming of COC
agreed well with Weller et al.14 on the study of solid-state
foaming of polycarbonate, suggesting that these effects are not
system specific and are determined by the foaming mechanisms. It is also noteworthy that when a saturation pressure of 7
MPa was employed, ultramicrocellular foams with a cell size of
∼0.3−1 μm and cell density of ∼1012 cells/cm3 can be
following the Laplace equation, where r is the radius of the
bubble. Therefore, a lower pressure differential is needed when
the bubble size is larger. This is the case for foaming at lower
saturation pressures. When the temperature is increased by
some increment, a relatively large change in the bubble size can
be achieved since the bubble can grow more easily. On the
other hand, bubble size is much smaller at higher saturation
pressure, due to the simple fact that many more bubbles grow
at the same time as a result of enhanced cell nucleation.
Therefore, for the same temperature increment, the change of
G
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Figure 8. Average foam cell density (left) and cell diameter (right) as a function of saturation pressure at different foaming temperatures. Lines are to
assist reading. Lines are not drawn if only two data points are available.
former and weak tensile stress field as a result of a lack of
concentration gradient.
3.2.4. Effect of Saturation Pressure. Cell size and cell
density were replotted as functions of saturation pressure for
the series of foaming temperatures (Figure 8). Upon increasing
the saturation pressure from 5 to 6 MPa, cell density increased
about 2 orders of magnitude (from 109 to 1011 cell/cm3) over
the entire foaming temperature range. This can be readily
understood by the homogeneous nucleation theory (eq 5).
When the saturation pressure was increased, the gas solubility
increased, enhancing nucleation. Furthermore, dissolved CO2 is
well known to reduce the surface tension.23,49 This would lead
to a reduction of the nucleation free energy and significantly
enhance the nucleation rate. As significantly more bubbles grow
simultaneously, growth of each bubble is limited by the
available gas, leading to a substantially smaller size as shown in
Figure 8b.
However further increasing the saturation pressure from 6 to
7 MPa had little impact on cell size and cell density. This does
not follow the prediction from homogeneous nucleation theory
and is in contrast with previous results on solid-state foaming of
polycarbonate14 and poly(ether imide) (PEI),19,20 where in the
latter case transition from micrometer to nanosized bubbles
occurred upon increasing saturation pressure.
To further investigate the pressure effect, samples were
saturated at 10 MPa and foamed. Unexpectedly, instead of
cellular structure, many lines that were orthogonal to the
thickness direction were observed in the samples for foaming
temperatures as low as 60 °C (Figure 9). High-magnification
micrographs revealed that the lines were similar to the crazes
observed by Weller et al.14 in PC foams. Furthermore, cracks,
which presumably evolved from the crazes, were observed.
Similar morphology containing crazes or cracks was also
observed with foamed samples saturated at 9 and 8 MPa
(micrographs not shown here).
It appeared that when the saturation pressure was increased
beyond 7 MPa, there was a fundamental change in the system
behavior in that upon heating the system may transition from
foaming to crazing. This transition may be heat-temperature
dependent. To further study and verify this phenomenon,
morphology evolution was investigated by heating the samples,
produced over a very broad temperature range below the Tg of
the pure polymer.
3.2.3. Cell Anisotropy. SEM micrographs of the foams
prepared with saturation pressures of 5 and 7 MPa are shown in
Figures 6 and 7, respectively. Samples saturated at 7 MPa
showed anisotropic cell structure when foamed at high foaming
temperature, where cells were elongated along the thickness
direction of the sample (these micrographs are the crosssection view of the foam sample cryo-fractured parallel to the
width direction).
Anisotropic cellular structures were reported in several
studies. Arora et al.12 prepared foams in a tube, during which
foam expansion was constrained radially (by the tube wall) and
favored axially (free expansion). They attributed the geometric
confinement responsible for the observed cell anisotropy. Zirkel
et al.47 discussed the influence of sample geometry on the
foaming process and cell anisotropy. They suggested that for
samples with disparate dimensions such as a thin sheet or film,
the resistance against bubble growth in plane was higher than
that for out of plane (thickness). This resulted in faster
expansion in the thickness direction and elongated cells.
Antunes et al.48 suggested that cell anisotropy resulted from
preferential cell growth in the direction of pressure release.
Herein we argue that the observed cell anisotropy is the
result of a new mechanism as follows. The COC polymer used
in the present study was severely plasticized by carbon
dioxide,10,43 and the plasticizing effect became more prominent
with increasing pressure. When highly plasticized samples were
subjected to high temperature during foaming, rapid diffusion
of the CO2 from the polymer matrix to the environment (a
competing process against bubble growth) led to development
of a distinct gas concentration gradient. As we shall discuss in
great detail in section 3.3.2, this concentration gradient would
lead to a localized tensile field developed along the gas diffusion
direction (the thickness direction of the thin sheet sample) and
elongation of cells in that direction. The process was facilitated
by a weak matrix and rapid establishment of the concentration
gradient. The absence of cell anisotropy in foams prepared at
lower pressure (5 MPa) and lower temperatures may be
attributed to the less prominent matrix plasticization in the
H
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Figure 9. SEM of COC samples saturated with 10 MPa and heated at 60 (a), 100 (b), 110 (c), 120 (d), and 130 °C (e) showing extensive parallel
lines that are crazes and cracks. An example is shown in f, which is the higher magnification view of the marked region of a.
investigated time range, the bubble density and size increased
with increasing heating time.
As discussed previously, at a saturation pressure of 7 MPa,
the eventual prevailing morphology is foam bubbles (for
example, see Figure 7). However, further investigation showed
that crazing may also take place at this saturation pressure. An
example is shown in Figure 11. Crazes appeared soon after the
sample was heated, whereas bubble appeared at a later time.
Moreover, in the vicinity of the crazes large areas of unfoamed
which were saturated at three different CO2 pressures (5, 7, and
10 MPa), for different amounts of time and their morphology
observed by SEM (Figures 10−12).
Cellular structure was formed in samples saturated at 5 MPa
(Figure 10). Bubbles first appeared in the outer region of the
sample when the heating time was increased to 2 s, since the
temperature there reached the effective glass transition
temperature earlier as the direction of thermal transfer was
from the boundary to the interior of the polymer. Within the
I
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Figure 10. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 5 MPa and heated at 150 °C for various heating times: 2 (a), 4 (b), 6 (c), and 10 s (d). Bubble
nucleation and formation of cellular structure is evident.
the other hand, a transition to cellular cavitation was observed
when the temperature was close to and above Tg. They
attributed this to the different mechanisms for advancement of
the craze tip, i.e., a switch from interface convolution at low
stresses to cellular cavitation at high stresses.
In this section we set out to analyze the transition
phenomenon in detail and explore the possible physical
processes involved at different pressures to provide more indepth understanding of the mechanisms.
3.3.1. Foaming under Low Saturation Pressure. Cell
nucleation in solid-state foaming of amorphous polymer has
been satisfactorily explained by the classical homogeneous
nucleation. When the polymer is removed from the highpressure environment, the dissolved gas becomes oversaturated
and the polymer−gas mixture is in thermodynamically
nonequilibrium state. The oversaturation is the driving force
for homogeneous bubble nucleation during which fluctuation of
gas clusters and aggregation thereof lead to formation of viable
nuclei. This is followed by diffusion of gas into the nuclei and
bubble growth. However, these processes are kinetically
prohibited when the temperature is lower than the effective
Tg of the polymer−gas mixture due to the rigidity of the matrix.
Alternatively, the gas can also slowly diffuse out of the matrix.
When the system is heated to a temperature higher than Tg, the
polymer chains gain sufficient mobility to reorient and
accommodate bubble nucleation and growth. Such mechanism
polymer were present, as shown in the Figure 11c. Apparently
the crazing process not only relieved the internal stress and
decreased the system free energy but also by phase separation it
also depleted the nearby gas and suppressed bubble nucleation
and growth in the vicinity.
When the saturation pressure was further increased to 10
MPa, cellular morphology completely disappeared and only
extensive crazes or cracks were present (Figure 12). Initially
nanosized voids were developed (Figure 12a), and as time
elapsed they grew in size and were increasingly elongated in the
thickness direction, which led to eventual formation of fibrils
between the voids (Figure 12b) and the craze structure
whereby the two surfaces were bridged by a network of fibrils of
drawn polymer (Figure 12c). The process resembles
remarkably that of a brittle failure of glassy polymers under
uniaxial tensile stress, and the craze structures formed also share
strong similarity.
3.3. Analysis of Foaming and Crazing Process. The
foaming investigation conducted earlier suggested that when
subjected to heating the COC−CO2 system may transition
from foaming to crazing, and the transition is largely dictated by
the saturation pressure. Investigation on foaming and crazing
transition is scarce in the literature. In one report Argon et al.50
studied the mechanism of crazing growth in glassy polymer
using the uni- or multiaxial stress experiments and found that
crazing took place when the polymer was in the glass state. On
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Figure 11. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 7 MPa and heated at 170 °C for various heating times: 3 (a), 5 (b), 7 (c), and 7 s (d). Scant crazes
were formed at an earlier time (a and b) than bubble appearance. Terminal morphology is dominantly cellular morphology (d) with scant crazes (c)
in the sample. Note that c and d were taken from different regions of the same sample.
was commonly adopted to explain solid-state foaming,10,51 and
in the current study, the behavior of the COC 6017 at low
saturation pressure (5 MPa) also follows well this mechanism.
3.3.2. Crazing under High Saturation Pressure. We now
discuss a physical phenomenon and its influence in solid-state
foaming that has received less attention: stress field development within the polymer−gas mixture. When the gas-saturated
polymer is removed from the high-pressure environment, a
pressure differential between the specimen and the ambient is
established. Since polymer chain relaxation is prohibited (due
to matrix rigidity) to relieve this internal stress, such pressure
differential creates a uniform triaxial tension or negative
hydrostatic pressure in the specimen. The magnitude of this
triaxial tension would increase with increasing gas concentration and temperature.
In addition, it is well known that polymers are swollen by the
dissolved gas. This generates dilation strain or volumetric strain
that is proportional to the gas concentration. After the sample is
removed from the high-pressure environment, gas desorption
take places, resulting in development of a concentration and
fugacity profile that decreases from the center toward the
surface of the sample. For the thin sheet sample used in the
current study, gradients are steepest in the thickness direction.
The characteristics of these gradients are primarily determined
by the gas diffusivity that itself is concentration, pressure, and
temperature dependent.52 Similarly, the resulting volumetric
strain also decreases from the interior to the exterior in the
thickness direction. This nonuniform strain distribution would
give rise to internal stresses,53 and the interior of the polymer
will exert extensive stress to its outer portion. To the first order
of approximation this internal stress profile can be considered
as a pseudotensile stress field in the thickness direction. A
higher saturation pressure results in a higher gas concentration
in the polymer and higher gas diffusivity (due to a higher
degree of plasticization54), leading to a steeper concentration
gradient and larger pseudotensile stress.
To summarize the above analysis, the stress profile within the
polymer−gas mixture is comprised of a triaxial tension field and
a pseudotensile stress field (in the thickness direction). The
two types of stress field are schematically shown in Scheme 1.
Both types of stress fields are more intensified in samples
saturated at higher pressure.
It shall be noted that such concept on the stress field
evolution in gas swollen polymers was fairly extensively studied
for elastomers, and the stresses were attributed to be the major
source of gas-induced damage observed in those materials.53,55−58 In particular, a detailed experimental and analytical
investigation by Briscoe et al. showed that the combined effects
of the triaxial tension and pseudotensile stress field could result
in rupture of elastomer.53
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Figure 12. SEM micrographs of COC saturated at 10 MPa and heated at 130 °C for various heating times showing crazes formation and growth: 2
(a), 6 (b), and 10 s (c). Circle in a indicates the nanosized voids. (d) Low-magnification view of c, where the square mark indicates the region where
image c is taken from. Note the extensive parallel lines consisting of crazes.
Scheme 1. Triaxial Tension and Tensile Stress Development Resulting from the Variation of CO2 Concentration (C) and
Resulting Variation of Pressure (P) and Dilative Strain (ε)
plasticization, the chain mobility of the polymer is significantly
enhanced and matrix strength reduced. Furthermore, the small
CO2 molecules can wet the surface and reduce the energy
required to create new surfaces in the polymer matrix, which is
beneficial to formation of new phase, such as cavitation.59
When all these are taken into account, it can be argued that
It is plausible that such combined effects of the triaxial
tension and pseudotensile stress field are responsible for the
craze formation observed in the current study. When the
polymer is saturated under higher pressure, the higher CO2
concentration results in significantly higher triaxial tension in
the polymer−gas mixture. Additionally, because of intensive
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of the COC−CO2 solution as a function of CO2 pressure, and
the prediction is shown in Figure 13. The system exhibits
when materials are saturated under high pressure, the triaxial
tension may have surpassed a critical level and cavity or void
nucleation readily proceeds even at temperatures below the
effective Tg, which is the minimum temperature for foaming to
occur. The voids can grow and coalesce when the sample is
subject to heating, during which development of both stress
and strain fields may be accelerated as a result of rapid diffusion
and matrix softening. At the same time, the voids are stretched
and increasingly elongated in the thickness direction because of
the evolving pseudotensile stress field, forming highly oriented
polymer fibrils between the voids. Note that this process is very
similar to the crazing of brittle polymer under uniaxial tension,
and the final craze structure consisted of the two surfaces
bridged by a network of fibrils of drawn polymer.
Thus, the craze structures observed in the current study can
be satisfactorily explained by the mechanisms discussed above,
as those samples were indeed saturated under higher pressure,
which would promote nucleation and propagation of crazes
during heating. Furthermore, the crazing process relieves the
internal stress and depletes the gas dissolved in the bulk. The
prominent nucleation and propagation of crazes (in systems
saturated under high pressures) would quickly exhaust the
available gas. Consequently, bubble nucleation may be totally
suppressed and cellular morphology prohibited. This was the
case for samples saturated at 10 MPa.
Crazing in solid-state foaming has been reported,14 but to
our knowledge, the current study is the first to report the
foaming−crazing transition phenomenon. The occurrence is
due to the unique combination of several factors in the present
systems that work in concert and lead to the behavior.
First, the COC−CO2 possesses a strong interaction that
enables substantial CO2 solubility but also the polymer matrix is
strongly plasticized and glass transition temperature severely
depressed. Indeed, Kraus et al.10 showed in the three polymers
they studied (COC, poly(ether sulfone) (PES), and polysufone
(PSU)), with the same amount of dissolved CO2, COC was the
most severely plasticized and showed the highest degree of Tg
depression. For the COC charged with between 3.9 and 7.8 wt
% CO2, the plasticization index was −14.24 °C/wt % CO2. By
comparison, for polystyrene, a polymer with moderate
interaction with CO2, the index was only −6.8 °C/wt %
CO2. In their study a COC with lower norbornene content
(Topas COC6013) was used. The higher norbornene content
in COC 6017 used in the current study gives rise to even higher
CO2 solubility when compared to the COC 601343 and hence
even higher Tg depression.
Second, the strongly plasticized polymer matrix shall have
greatly reduced strength, so that upon heating the stress fields
(in the thickness direction) developed quickly and exceed the
threshold and the matrix in essence goes through the brittle
failure similar to when subjected to uniaxial tension. The lack of
strength in extremely plasticized COC appears to be supported
by Gendron et al,33 where they showed that at temperatures
significantly higher than the glass transition temperature the
COC did not show appreciable melt strength and strain
hardening.
To further examine the COC 6017−CO2 system behavior,
we measured CO2 solubility in COC 6017 at temperatures
higher than the pure polymer Tg and modeled the behavior by
the Sanchez−Lacombe equation of state (SL EoS). Following
the thermodynamic framework developed by Condo et al.60
and applying the Gibbs−DiMarzio thermodynamic criterion for
glass transition, we calculated the glass transition temperature
Figure 13. Prediction of Tg of COC 6017−CO2 solution vs CO2
pressure showing retrograde vitrification phenomenon. Sample was
saturated at 330.15 K (57 °C) and 13.8 MPa (indicated by the point in
the figure) for 48 h, after which the pressure was quickly released.
Resulting sample (photograph shown as the insert) contains a massive
amount of lines that consist of crazes and cracks. This provides direct
support to the proposed mechanisms on the role of foaming
nucleation and crazing discussed in the text.
retrograde behavior,60,61 where the system exhibits two glass
transition temperatures. With decreasing temperature the
system transitions from rubbery to glassy state and once
again to rubbery state. The second transition is a direct
consequence of the strong polymer−CO2 interaction and the
significantly enhanced CO2 solubility in the polymer as
temperature is lowed. As a result, the polymer chain is heavily
plasticized and gains sufficient mobility that the system
transitions from the glassy to the rubber state. Such
phenomenon has been observed in several polymer−CO2
systems that show strong interactions, and ultramicro- or
nanosized foams were prepared62−64 enabled by the exceptionally high CO2 solubility and the existence of a rubbery state at
low temperature.
To test whether the high CO2 solubility and substantially
reduced matrix strength are responsible for the observed
crazing, a sample was saturated at 57 °C and 13.8 MPa for 48 h
before releasing the pressure. According to the model
prediction (indicated in Figure 13), these conditions reside
outside the retrograde envelop and the temperature is higher
than the glass transition temperature of the polymer−gas
mixture (T > Tg). However, after the pressure was released and
sample taken out of the pressure vessel, no foaming was
observed. Instead, a massive amount of macroscopic lines were
observed in the sample (insert of Figure 13). The lines were
cracks that can only result from growth of crazes. Under the
saturation condition used, the COC matrix plasticization is
extremely severe and hence the severe reduction of matrix
strength. In addition, an arguably enormous stress field is
developed after the sample was taken out of the pressure vessel
because of the extremely high gas solubility and enhanced
diffusivity. The experimental conditions used herein thus
exemplify the driving forces for crazing to an extreme extent.
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Scheme 2. (a) Bubble Formation from Homogeneous Nucleation under Low Saturation Pressure; (b) Crazing Formation from
the Cooperative Effects of Triaxial Tension and Tensile Stress Field under High Saturation Pressure; (c) Simultaneous
Formation of Bubble and Crazing under Medium Saturation Pressure
described well by the dual-sorption model. Systematic
investigation of the effects of the process parameters, e.g.,
foaming temperature, foaming time, and saturation pressure,
was conducted to tailor microcellular foam structures. The
resulting foam structures which had average cell diameter in the
range of 0.3−7.5 μm and cell density on the order of 109−1012
cells/cm3 can be controlled by manipulating processing
conditions. An ultramicrocelluar foam with a cell size of ∼0.3
μm and cell density of ∼1012 cells/cm3 can be obtained at
saturation pressures of 6 and 7 MPa.
Solid-state foaming of COC was found to be dictated by two
competing processes, bubble nucleation vs crazing. The crazing
process was analyzed in detail based on the stress field
development. The triaxial tensile stress field in the gas−
polymer mixture resulted from the volumetric swelling or
dilation strain giving rise to nucleation of voids, and the
pseudotensile stress field from diffusion resulted in a gas
concentration gradient that facilitates growth of the crazes and
cracks. As a result of the strong COC−CO2 interaction and
accompanied depression of the glass transition temperature and
reduction of the matrix rigidity, crazing becomes more
prominent with increasing saturation pressure and eventually
completely dominates. The significant plasticization of the
polymer sample at high saturation pressure facilitated the
crazing process at temperatures below the effective glass
transition temperature, which is the minimum temperature
required for foaming.
That under these conditions the nucleation for crazing
completely dominates and foaming has been completely
suppressed in the sample provides direct experimental support
for the discussed mechanisms.
3.3.3. Coexistence of the Foaming and Crazing Process
under Medium Pressure. To summarize sections 3.3.1 and
3.3.2, both foaming and crazing are possible in solid-state
foaming of COC. Foaming is favored when the saturation
pressure is low and suppressed when the saturation pressure is
high. Crazing, on the other hand, has an opposite pressure
dependency. It is conceivable that in the intermediate-pressure
regimes both the foaming and the crazing processes may be
possible. On one hand, voids and crazes may still form because
of the stress fields. On the other hand, the less severe stress
fields lead to fewer and discrete crazes, whose growth is slow
with limited consumption of gas. Thus, bubble nucleation and
growth are still possible when the effective Tg is reached, which
would compete for the available gas. Furthermore, some of the
voids resulting from the triaxial tension may not be able to
grow into crazes before the effective Tg is attained. As discussed
by Holl et al.,27 they would instead serve as nuclei for bubble
growth.
These three different processes proceeding under different
saturation pressure are schematically illustrated in Scheme 2.
4. CONCLUSIONS
In this study, we investigated the solid-state batch foaming of a
cycloolefin copolymer (COC) using carbon dioxide. The gas
sorption properties that are critical for foaming were
characterized first. It was found that gas sorption can be
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AUTHOR INFORMATION
Corresponding Author
*E-mail: zeng@eng.fsu.edu (C.Z.); yaozhen@zju.edu.cn (Z.Y.).
Notes
The authors declare no competing financial interest.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Funding from the Center of Excellence in Advanced Materials
by the State of Florida is acknowledged.
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