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Featured researches published by Priti Xavier.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014

Nanoparticle-Driven Intermolecular Cooperativity and Miscibility in Polystyrene/Poly(vinyl methyl ether) Blends

Avanish Bharati; Priti Xavier; Goutam Prasanna Kar; Giridhar Madras; Suryasarathi Bose

The effect of silver nanoparticles (nAg) in PS/PVME [polystyrene/poly(vinyl methyl ether)] blends was studied with respect to the evolution of morphology, demixing temperature, and segmental dynamics. In the early stage of demixing, PVME developed an interconnected network that coarsened in the late stage. The nAg induced miscibility in the blends as supported by shear rheological measurements. The physicochemical processes that drive phase separation in blends also led to migration of nAg to the PVME phase as supported by AFM. The segmental dynamics was greatly influenced by the presence of nAg due to the specific interaction of nAg with PVME. Slower dynamics and an increase in intermolecular cooperativity in the presence of nAg further supported the role of nAg in delaying the phase separation processes and augmenting the demixing temperature in the blends. Different theoretical models were assessed to gain insight into the dynamic heterogeneity in PS/PVME blends at different length scales.


RSC Advances | 2014

Reduced graphene oxide induced phase miscibility in polystyrene–poly(vinyl methyl ether) blends

Priti Xavier; Keshav Sharma; K. Elayaraja; K. S. Vasu; A. K. Sood; Suryasarathi Bose

Graphene oxide and reduced graphene oxide (r-GO) were synthesized by wet chemistry and the effect of r-GO in PS–PVME blends was investigated here with respect to phase miscibility, intermolecular cooperativity in the glass transition region and concentration fluctuation variance by shear rheology and dielectric spectroscopy. The spinodal decomposition temperature (Ts) and correlation length were evaluated from isochronal temperature scans in shear rheology. The r-GO is shown to induce miscibility in the blends, which may lead to increased local heterogeneity in the blends, though the length of cooperatively re-arranged regions (ξ) at Tg is more or less unaltered. The evolution of the phase morphology as a function of temperature was assessed using polarized optical microscopy (POM). In the case of the 60/40 PS–PVME blends with 0.25 wt% r-GO, apart from significant refinement in the morphology, retention of the interconnected ligaments of PVME was observed, even in the late stages of phase separation suggesting that the coarsening of the phase morphology has been slowed down in the presence of r-GO. This phenomenon was also supported by AFM. Surface enrichment of PVME, owing to its lower surface tension, in the demixed samples was supported by XPS scans. The interconnected network of PVME has resulted in significantly higher permittivity in the bi-phasic blends, although the concentration of r-GO is below the percolation threshold.


RSC Advances | 2014

Electromagnetic shielding materials and coatings derived from gelation of multiwall carbon nanotubes in an LCST mixture

Priti Xavier; Suryasarathi Bose

Thermally induced demixing in an LCST mixture, polystyrene (PS)/poly[vinyl methyl ether] (PVME), was used as a template to design materials with high electrical conductivity. This was facilitated by gelation of multiwall carbon nanotubes (MWNTs) in a given phase of the blends. The MWNTs were mixed in the miscible blends and the thermodynamic driven demixing further resulted in selective localization in the PVME phase of the blends. This was further confirmed by atomic force microscopy (AFM). The time dependent gelation of MWNTs at shallow quench depth, evaluated using isochronal temperature sweep by rheology, was studied by monitoring the melt electrical conductivity of the samples in situ by an LCR meter coupled to a rheometer. By varying the composition in the mixture, several intricate shapes like gaskets and also coatings capable of attenuating the EM radiation in the microwave frequency can be derived. For instance, the PVME rich mixtures can be molded in the form of a gasket, O-ring and other intricate shapes while the PS rich mixtures can be coated onto an insulating polymer to enhance the shielding effectiveness (SE) for EM radiation. The SE of the various materials was analyzed using a vector network analyzer in both the X-band (8.2 to 12 GHz) and the Ku-band (12 to 18 GHz) frequency. The improved SE upon gelation of MWNTs in the demixed blends is well evident by comparing the SE before and after demixing. A reflection loss of −35 dB was observed in the blends with 2 wt% MWNTs. Further, by coating a layer of ca. 0.15 mm of PS/PVME/MWNT, a SE of −15 dB at 18 GHz could be obtained.


RSC Advances | 2016

Designer porous antibacterial membranes derived from thermally induced phase separation of PS/PVME blends decorated with an electrospun nanofiber scaffold

Priti Xavier; Shubham Jain; Vijay Srinivas T; Kaushik Chatterjee; Suryasarathi Bose

We report the development of porous membranes by thermally induced phase separation of a PS/PVME (polystyrene/polyvinyl[methyl ether]) blend, which is a typical LCST mixture. The morphology of the membrane after etching out the PVME phase was characterized by scanning electron microscopy. To give the membrane an antibacterial surface, polystyrene (PS) and poly[vinyl(methyl ether)]-alt-maleic anhydride (PVME-MAH) with silver nanoparticles (nAg) were electrospun on the membrane surface. Pure water flux was evaluated by using a cross-flow membrane setup. The microgrooved fibers changed the flux across the membrane depending on the surface properties. The antibacterial properties of the membrane were confirmed by the reduction in the colony count of E. coli. The SEM images show the disruption of the bacterial cell membrane and the antibacterial mechanism was discussed.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Thermally induced phase separation in levitated polymer droplets

Binita Pathak; Priti Xavier; Suryasarathi Bose; Saptarshi Basu

We report thermally induced rapid phase separation in PS/PVME polymer blends using a unique contact free droplet based architecture. De-mixing of homogeneous blends due to inter component dynamic asymmetry is aggravated by the externally supplied heat. Separation of polymer blends is usually investigated in the bulk which is a tedious process and requires several hours for completion. Alternatively, separation in droplet configuration reduces the process timescale by about 3-5 orders due to a constrained micron-sized domain [fast processing and high throughput] while maintaining similar separation morphologies as in the bulk. We observed the effect of heating rates on the phase separation length and timescales. Furthermore, the separation length scale can be precisely controlled across one order by simply tuning the heating rate. The methodology can be scaled up for applications ranging from surface patterning to pharmaceutics.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2016

Is kinetic polymer arrest very specific to multiwalled carbon nanotubes

Priti Xavier; Keerthi M. Nair; Lasitha K; Suryasarathi Bose

In this study we have assessed, using dielectric relaxation spectroscopy (DRS), the confinement effects of the more mobile chain in partially miscible polymeric blends of PS/PVME (polystyrene/poly(vinyl methyl ether)) in the presence of anisotropically shaped MWCNTs (multiwalled carbon nanotubes). To understand if this confinement effect is very specific to MWCNTs, the characteristic dimensions of which are often close to the radius of gyration of the polymeric chains, a few other particles like spherical silver, stacked clay tactoids and platy graphene sheets at similar weight fractions were also incorporated and systematically studied. The DRS studies reveal that the more mobile chain (here PVME) experiences possibly two different environments in the presence of frozen PS and more importantly in the presence of MWCNTs at temperatures close to and not so far from the blend Tg. The presence of bimodal relaxations with a weak temperature independent faster relaxation in the blends is composition dependent (PS rich blends). Assuming that there are no chemical interactions of PVME with the particles, these confinement effects seem to be very specific to MWCNTs as the bimodal relaxations were completely absent in the case of other nanoparticles. In the case of polymer blends, when two different chains are brought together, a loss in the deformational entropy is expected due to the excluded volume interaction and chain connectivity effects. In the presence of nanoparticles, especially MWCNTs, the polymer coils are subjected to perturbation leading to entropic loss in the system, which determine the miscibility in the blends. The configurational entropy near glass transition was assessed to understand the improved miscibility due to MWCNTs in this particular blend. The length of cooperativity suggests a cooperative motion of PS and PVME over shorter length scales in the case of MWCNTs as compared to other particles. This also hints at perturbed PVME motion in the network of MWCNTs. Taken together, our study reveals that the kinetic PVME arrest results in two different environments and is dependent on the effective concentration of MWCNTs in the blends.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Multiwalled-carbon-nanotube-induced miscibility in near-critical PS/PVME blends: assessment through concentration fluctuations and segmental relaxation.

Priti Xavier; Suryasarathi Bose


Composites Science and Technology | 2015

Selective localisation of multi walled carbon nanotubes in polypropylene/natural rubber blends to reduce the percolation threshold

Sharika Thankappan Nair; P Poornima Vijayan; Priti Xavier; Suryasarathi Bose; Soney C. George; Sabu Thomas


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

Polymer-grafted multiwall carbon nanotubes functionalized by nitrene chemistry: effect on cooperativity and phase miscibility.

Goutam Prasanna Kar; Priti Xavier; Suryasarathi Bose


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015

The key role of polymer grafted nanoparticles in the phase miscibility of an LCST mixture

Goutam Prasanna Kar; Avanish Bharati; Priti Xavier; Giridhar Madras; Suryasarathi Bose

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Suryasarathi Bose

Indian Institute of Science

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Avanish Bharati

Indian Institute of Science

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Giridhar Madras

Indian Institute of Science

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A. K. Sood

Indian Institute of Science

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Sabu Thomas

Mahatma Gandhi University

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Binita Pathak

Indian Institute of Science

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Jiji Abraham

Mahatma Gandhi University

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K. Elayaraja

Indian Institute of Science

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K. S. Vasu

Indian Institute of Science

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