Abstract

The humidity-induced physical aging, or structural relaxation, of spin-cast Nafion thin films on gold, carbon, and native oxide silicon (n-SiO2) substrates was examined using spectroscopic ellipsometry (SE). Physical aging rates, β, were calculated from the change in measured sample thickness, h, upon exposure to controlled humidity. Three Nafion films, h = 188, 57, and 27 nm, deposited on gold substrates demonstrated an increased β with decreasing thickness due to confinement. The Nafion film on n-SiO2, h = 165 nm, also showed a humidity-induced aging, while a Nafion film deposited on carbon, h = 190 nm, exhibited no measurable humidity-induced aging. The reported rate of aging was related to the strength of the polymer/substrate interactions during film formation. Strong interactions between Nafion and the gold and n-SiO2 substrates anchored the thin film to the substrate during film formation, resulting in a nonequilibrium as-cast film and subsequent relaxation upon exposure to water vapor until complete plasticization. Weak interactions between the carbon substrate and Nafion resulted in fully relaxed as-cast films which displayed no relaxation upon hydration.

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