Abstract

Encapsulating and functionalizing polymer nanofibers can improve the polymers chemical resistance and surface reactivity, enabling new applications including biosensing, flexible electronics, gas filtration, and chemical separations. Polymer fiber functionalization typically involves energy intensive wet chemical treatments and/or plasma exposure. Recent results show low temperature atomic layer deposition (ALD) to be a viable means to coat nanofibers with uniform and conformal inorganic and hybrid organic–inorganic layers. For this article, the authors describe how the mechanical properties of nylon-6 nanofibers are affected by ALD coatings of TiO2 and other metal oxides. They find that the stress–strain behavior of nylon-6 nanofibers depends strongly on the specific precursor chemistry used in the coating process. For ALD TiO2 coatings, titanium tetrachloride tended to embrittle the fibers, whereas titanium isopropoxide had a more subtle effect. Physical characterization shows that the TiCl4 diffused into the nylon-6 and reacted subsurface, whereas the titanium isopropoxide tended to react on the surface producing a more abrupt organic/inorganic interface. Results show that precursor choice is an important factor when designing thin film coating processes on polymeric substrates.

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