The Glass Transition
The Glass Transition
Keywords
amorphous, crystal, elastomer, thermoplastic
Have you ever left a plastic bucket or some other plastic object
outside during the winter, and found that it cracks or breaks more
easily than it would in the summer time? What you experienced was
the phenomenon known as the glass transition. This transition is
something that only happens to polymers, and is one of the things that
make polymers unique. The glass transition is pretty much what it
sounds like. There is a certain temperature(different for each polymer)
called the glass transition temperature, or Tg for short. When the
polymer is cooled below this temperature, it becomes hard and brittle,
like glass.
Now, to understand just why polymers with no order to them are hard
and brittle below a certain temperature and soft and pliable above it, it
can help to think of a polymer in the amorphous state as a big room
full of slithering snakes. Each snake is a polymer chain. Now as you
may remember, snakes are cold blooded animals, so all their body
heat has to come from their surroundings. When it's warm, the snakes
are happy, and can go on about their business of slithering and sliding
with no trouble at all. They will move all about randomly, over and
around each other, and they slither hither and thither, just having a
great time, or as good a time as snakes ever have.
But when it gets cold, snakes don't move too much. They slow down
without any heat, and tend to just sit still. Now they're still all wrapped
around, over, and under each other, but as far as motion is
concerned, it just doesn't happen.
Now imagine trying to drive a bulldozer through this room full of
snakes. If it's warm, and the snakes are moving, they can quickly
slither out of your way, and the bulldozer moves through the room,
causing a minimal amount of snake damage. But if it's cold, one of two
things will happen to the motionless snakes. Either (A) the snakes will
be stronger than the bulldozer, and the bulldozer won't get through,
and the snakes will stay put; or (B) the bulldozer will be stronger than
the snakes, and they'll get squashed, still not moving anywhere.
Polymers are the same way. When the temperature is warm, the
polymer chains can move around easily. So, when you take a piece of
the polymer and bend it, the molecules, being in motion already, have
no trouble moving into new positions to relieve the stress you have
placed on them. But if you try to bend sample of a polymer below
its Tg, the polymer chains won't be able to move into new positions to
relieve the stress which you have placed on them. So just like in the
example of a room full of cold snakes, one of two things will happen.
Either (A) the chains are strong enough to resist the force you apply,
and the sample won't bend; or (B) the force you apply will be too much
for the motionless polymer chains to resist, and being unable to move
around to relieve the stress, the polymer sample will break or shatter
in your hands.
Now the exact temperature at which the polymer chains undergo this
big change in mobility depends on the structure of the polymer. To see
how a small change in structure can mean a big change in Tg, take a
look at the difference between poly(methyl acrylate) and poly(methyl
methacrylate) on the acrylate page.
Twistin' the Night Away
There is a difference between polymers and snakes that we probably
should discuss at this point. An individual snake is not only wiggling
around, but actually moving from one side of the room to the other.
This is called translational motion. When you walk down the street,
presuming you're not like most Americans who never walk anywhere,
you are undergoing translational motion. While polymers are not
incapable of such motion, mostly they are not undergoing this kind of
motion. But they are still moving around, wiggling this way and that,
much like little kids in church. To be sure, by the time we get down to
the glass transition temperature, it is already too cold for the polymer
molecules, tangled up in each other as they are, to move any distance
in one direction.
The motion that allows a polymer way above its glass transition
temperature to be pliable is not usually translational motion, but what
is known in the business as long-range segmental motion. While the
polymer chain as a whole may not be going anywhere, segments of
the chain can wiggle around, swing to and fro, and turn like a giant
corkscrew. The polymer samples may be thought of as a crowd of
people on a dance floor. While each whole body tends to stay in the
same spot, various arms, legs, and whatnot are changing position a
lot. When the temperature drops to near or below the Tg, for polymers
the party's over, and the long-range segmental motion grinds to a halt.
When this long-range motion ceases, the glass transition occurs, and
the polymer changes from being soft and pliable to being hard and
brittle. So when the "Polar Vortex" hits your town next time, DON'T try
to shovel snow with one of those plastic snow shovels.
See for yourself
Now to make sure this is all clear, we made a little movie showing
what happens to the polymer chains at the glass transition
temperature. Click here to watch it.
Try This!
Want to have some fun? First, get your teacher to bring some liquid
nitrogen to class, or maybe some "dry ice" suspended in acetone or
methanol. Then put some in a styrofoam cup, and drop in some
household objects made from polymers, like rubber bands or plastic
wrap. The liquid nitrogen, being so cold, will cool the objects below
their glass transition temperatures. Try to bend your rubber band (hold
it with a pair of pliers, because you could get frostbite if you try to
touch it with your fingers) and it will shatter! Neato, huh? The rubber
band will shatter because it's below its glass transition temperature.
And sandwich wrap? It will crumple and sound like hard thin plastic,
and might even shatter if it's cold enough.
Measuring the Tg
Want to know more about the wonderful glass transition? Read these
little segments!
Sometimes, a polymer has a Tg that is higher than we'd like. That's
ok, we just put something in it called a plasticizer. This is a small
molecule which will get in between the polymer chains, and space
them out from each other. We call this increasing the free volume.
When this happens they can slide past each other more easily. When
they slide past each other more easily, they can move around at lower
temperatures than they would without the plasticizer. In this way,
the Tg of a polymer can be lowered, to make a polymer more pliable,
and easier to work with.
If you're wondering what kind of small molecule we're talking about,
here are some that are used as plasticizers:
Have you ever smelled "that new car smell" in some friend's new car?
It's not something I smell too often on the money I make, but that
smell is the plasticizer evaporating from the plastic parts on the inside
of your car. After many years, if enough of it evaporates, your
dashboard will no longer be plasticized. The Tg of the polymers in
your dashboard will rise above room temperature, and the dashboard
will become brittle and crack.
Darn it!
The Glass Transition vs. Melting
Keywords:
first order transition, heat capacity, second order transition
Now once the polymer has melted, the temperature begins to rise
again, but now it rises at a slower rate. The molten polymer has a
higher heat capacity than the solid crystalline polymer, so it can
absorb more heat with a smaller increase in temperature.
It may help to look at some nifty pictures. The plots show the amount
of heat added to the polymer on the y-axis and the temperature that
you'd get with a given amount of heat on the x-axis.
The plot on the left shows what happens when you heat a 100%
crystalline polymer. You can look at it and see that it's discontinuous.
See that break? That's the melting temperature. At that break, a lot of
heat is added without any temperature increase at all. That's the latent
heat of melting. We see the slope getting steeper on the high side of
the break. The slope of this kind of plot is equal to the heat capacity,
so this increase in steepness corresponds to our increase in heat
capacity above the melting point.
But in the plot on the right, which shows what happens to a 100%
amorphous polymer when you heat it, we don't have a break. The only
change we see at the glass transition temperature is an increase in
the slope, which means, of course, that we have an increase in heat
capacity. We can see a heat capacity change at the Tg, but no break,
like we do in the plot for the crystalline polymer. As I said before, there
is no latent heat involved with the glass transition.
And this, my friends, right before your eyes, is the difference between
a first order transition like melting, and a second order transition like
the glass transition.
What Becomes the High Tg Polymer?
Ok, we know at this point that some polymers have high Tg's, and
some have low Tg's. The question we haven't bothered to ask yet is
this: why? What makes one polymer glass transition at 100 oC and
another at 500 oC?
The very simple answer is this: How easily the chains move. A
polymer chain that can move around fairly easily will have a very
low Tg, while one that doesn't move so well will have a high one. This
makes sense. The more easily a polymer can move, the less heat it
takes for the chains to commence wiggling and break out of the rigid
glassy state and into the soft rubbery state.
I'm glad you asked that. There are several things that affect the
mobility of a polymer chain. Go look at each one!
Backbone Flexibility
Pendant Groups Part I: Fish Hooks and Boat Anchors
Pendant Groups Part II: Elbow Room
Backbone Flexibility
This is the biggest and most important one to remember. The more
flexible the backbone chain is, the better the polymer will move, and
the lower its Tg will be. Let's look at some examples. The most
dramatic one is that of silicones. Let's take a look at one called
polydimethylsiloxane.
This backbone is so flexible that polydimethylsiloxane has a Tg way
down at -127 oC! This chain is so flexible that it's a liquid at room
temperature, and it's even used to thicken shampoos and
conditioners.
This polymer's backbone is just plain stiff. It's so rigid that it doesn't
have a Tg! You can heat this thing to over 500 oC and it will still stay in
the glassy state. It will decompose from all the heat before it lets itself
undergo a glass transition! In order to make a polymer that's at all
processable we have to put some flexible groups in the backbone
chain. Ether groups work nicely.
Polymers like this are called poly(ether sulfones), and those flexible
ether groups bring the Tg of this one down to a more manageable
190 oC.
Pendant Groups Part I:
Fish Hooks and Boat Anchors
One of the best pendant groups for getting a high Tg is the big bulky
adamantyl group. An adamantyl group is derived from a compound
called adamantane.
Click on the adamantane to see it in 3-D and find out more about this
interesting molecule!
A big group like this does more than just act like a hook that catches
on nearby molecules and keeps the polymer from moving. It's a
downright boat anchor. Not only does it get caught on nearby polymer
chains, its sheer mass is such a load for its polymer chain to move
that it makes the polymer chain move much more slowly. To see how
much this affects the Tg, just take a look at two poly(ether ketones),
one with an adamantane pendant group and one without.
The Tg of the polymer on the top is already decent at 119 oC, but the
adamantyl group raises it even higher, to 225 oC.
Pendant Groups Part II:
Elbow Room
But big bulky pendant groups can lower the Tg, too. You see, the big
pendant groups limit how closely the polymer chains can pack
together. The further they are from each other, the more easily they
can move around. This lowers the Tg, in the same way
a plasticizer does. The fancy way to say that there is more room
between the polymer chains is to say there is more free volume in the
polymer. The more free volume, the lower the Tg generally. We can
see this with a series of methacrylate polymers:
You can see a big drop each time we make that pendant alkyl chain
one carbon longer. We start out at 120 oC for poly(methyl
methacrylate), but by the time we get to poly(butyl methacrylate)
the Tg has dropped to only 20oC, pretty close to room temperature