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Topic: Surface chemistry question (silane coupling agents)  (Read 1723 times)

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Offline Phalcone42

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Surface chemistry question (silane coupling agents)
« on: October 22, 2018, 11:29:55 AM »
Hello.
I'm looking into adding silane coupling agents to a silica surface to promote adhesion properties in an glass-polymer laminate composite.
Unfortunately, I have only a cursory knowledge of surface chemistry. The coupling agents I am looking at are R-(Si)-(OR')3 types, where R' = Methyl, ethyl, isopropyl.

A few questions I have:

Are there any equations; approximations for modelling the fraction of the surface modified by coupling agents?
(Can model this particular surface as a flat plane without curvature)

What sort of conditions at the glass surface will affect the degree of surface functionalization?
(I hypothesize that drying the surface to remove water will decrease the reactivity of the coupling agents, but I am unsure)

What sort of proportionality should the degree of functionalization theoretically have to other properties such as adhesion strength?
(linear, logarithmic, ect)

Does anyone here have any references they could share to help me understand the topic better?


Thanks in advance for the help.

Offline wildfyr

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Re: Surface chemistry question (silane coupling agents)
« Reply #1 on: October 22, 2018, 01:24:09 PM »
There are some meaty questions. This is part of my field, and I'll do my best to answer them,

I am not familiar with theoretical approaches for modeling this reaction on the surface, but the reality is there there will be near 100% coverage with a monolayer, and in addition there will be "islands" that are piles of oligomers that are areas of increased thickness if you let it sit, say, overnight. If you use very very dilute conditions and/or short reaction times you can get less than 100% coverage, but that was never a goal of mine. Purifying the silane by distillation ahead of time can reduce these islands, but for some species they are just a reality. Again, it wasn't a feature that damaged my work when present. I wanted full coverage.

A typical set of conditions for attaching a tri-alkoxysilane to a surface would be 50 uL of silane in 20 mL toluene with a tiny amount of catalytic triethylamine. To get this reaction to work is trivially easy. To do it very precisely and repeatably does necessitate the use of dry reagents. It is also important to clean the surface thoroughly. I suggest sonications in hexane, acetone, water, then whatever your cleanest organic solvent is (isopropanol is often very clean). We would then plasma clean our slides with argon. I often did my silanations right on the bench in a slide holder with a top on, but for more precise ones we did them in a glovebox with dried reagents. And frankly the triethylamine was not used by many of my labmates, with perfectly good results.

I unfortunately do not know much about adhesion strength vs functionality, have you dived deeply into the literature on this one? I get the feeling there is some AFM work out there that could address your question, however it is a complex one. I punched "silane adhesion strength" into google scholar and got this one right off the bat "Chain Length Dependence of the Frictional Properties of Alkylsilane Molecules Self-Assembled on Mica Studied by Atomic Force Microscopy" https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/la950771u. It has been cited many times. I bet what you are looking for is somewhere in the family of articled citing or cited by such an article.


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