Sebastian Emmerling
Max Planck Society
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sebastian Emmerling.
ACS Nano | 2013
Tassilo Kaule; Yi Zhang; Sebastian Emmerling; Sascha A. Pihan; Renate Foerch; Jochen S. Gutmann; Hans-Jürgen Butt; Rüdiger Berger; Urs T. Duerig; Armin W. Knoll
We explore the effect of an ultrathin elastic coating to optimize the mechanical stability of an underlying polymer film for nanoscale applications. The coating consists of a several nanometer thin plasma-polymerized norbornene layer. Scanning probes are used to characterize the system in terms of shear-force-induced wear and thermally assisted indentation. The layer transforms a weakly performing polystyrene film into a highly wear-resistive system, ideal for high-density and low-power data storage applications. The result can be understood from the indentation characteristics with a hot and sharp indenter tip. The latter gives rise to a deformation mode in the fully plastic regime, enabling a simple interpretation of the results. The softening transition and the yield stress of the system on a microsecond time scale and a nanometer size scale were obtained. We show that the plastic deformation is governed by yielding in the polystyrene sublayer, which renders the overall system soft for plastic deformation. The ultrathin protection layer contributes as an elastic skin, which shields part of the temperature and pressure and enables the high wear resistance against lateral forces. Moreover, the method of probing polymers at microsecond and nanometer size scales opens up new opportunities for studying polymer physics in a largely unexplored regime. Thus, we find softening temperatures of more than 100 °C above the polystyrene glass transition, which implies that for the short interaction time scales the glassy state of the polymer is preserved up to this temperature.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2013
Cornelius Friedrichs; Sebastian Emmerling; Gunnar Kircher; Robert Graf; Hans Wolfgang Spiess
The chain dynamics at the glass transition of poly(ethylmethacrylate) in the bulk is compared to that of mixtures of the polymer with nanoparticles by advanced NMR methods. In order to make the two components compatible, the particles were functionalized with the polymer itself. Particular emphasis is placed on the extended local chain conformations of this polymer accessible by (13)C NMR spectroscopy. The isotropization dynamics of these extended conformations is only slightly changed in the mixtures, but is significantly slowed down by attachment of the chains to the nanoparticles themselves. The slowing down is studied at various distances from the nanoparticle and is observed for most of the attached chains segments except for the chain ends. The results are put into perspective to the glass transition in polymers attached to surfaces, thin polymer layers, and the chain dynamics of star polymers.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015
Sascha A. Pihan; Sebastian Emmerling; Hans-Jürgen Butt; Rüdiger Berger; Jochen S. Gutmann
We report measurements of structure, mechanical properties, glass transition temperature, and contact angle of a novel nanocomposite material consisting of swellable silsesquioxane nanoparticles with grafted poly(ethyl methacrylate) (PEMA) brushes and PEMA matrices with varying molecular weight. We measured the interparticle distance at the surface of the composites using scanning probe microscopy (SPM) and in the bulk of ∼0.5 μm thick films by grazing incidence small angle X-ray scattering (GISAXS). For a given molecular weight of the brush unstable dispersions at high molecular weight of the matrix indicate an intrinsic incompatibility between polymer-grafted-nanoparticles and homopolymer matrices. This incompatibility is affirmed by a high contact angle between the polymer-grafted-nanoparticles and the high molecular weight matrix as measured by SPM. For unstable dispersions, we measured a decreased glass transition temperature along with a decreased plateau modulus by dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) which indicates the formation of a liquid-like layer at the brush-matrix interface. This proves the ability to decouple the structural and mechanical properties from the potential to be swollen with small molecules. It opens a new area of use of these soft nanocomposites as slow release materials with tailored mechanical properties.
Colloid and Polymer Science | 2011
Mine Memesa; Sebastian Lenz; Sebastian Emmerling; Sebastian K. Nett; Jan Perlich; Peter Müller-Buschbaum; Jochen S. Gutmann
Macromolecules | 2012
Jannis W. Ochsmann; Sebastian Lenz; Philipp Lellig; Sebastian Emmerling; Ali A. Golriz; Peter Reichert; Jichun You; Jan Perlich; Stephan V. Roth; Rüdiger Berger; Jochen S. Gutmann
Wear | 2011
Sascha A. Pihan; Sebastian Emmerling; Hans-Jürgen Butt; Jochen S. Gutmann; Rüdiger Berger
European Physical Journal-applied Physics | 2010
Sebastian Lenz; Massimo Bonini; Sebastian K. Nett; Maria C. Lechmann; Sebastian Emmerling; Ralf S. Kappes; Mine Memesa; Andreas Timmann; Stephan V. Roth; Jochen S. Gutmann
Macromolecules | 2010
Sebastian Emmerling; Laura B. N. Langer; Sascha A. Pihan; Philipp Lellig; Jochen S. Gutmann
European Journal of Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Ya-Jun Cheng; Shaoying Zhou; Markus Wolkenhauer; Gina-Gabriela Bumbu; Sebastian Lenz; Mine Memesa; Sebastian K. Nett; Sebastian Emmerling; Werner Steffen; Jochen S. Gutmann
Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 2010
Jannis W. Ochsmann; Sebastian Lenz; Sebastian Emmerling; Ralf S. Kappes; Sebastian K. Nett; Maria C. Lechmann; Stephan V. Roth; Jochen S. Gutmann