Polymerization-induced phase separation (PIPS) is the occurrence of phase separation in a multicomponent mixture induced by the polymerization of one or more components. The increase in molecular weight of the reactive component renders one or more components to be mutually immiscible in one another, resulting in spontaneous phase segregation.
Polymerization-induced phase separation can be initiated either through thermally induced polymerization or photopolymerization. The process general occurs through spinodal decomposition, commonly resulting in the formation of co-continuous phases.
The process of polymerization-induced phase separation (PIPS) can be analyzed using classical polymer thermodynamics, most generally via the Flory-Huggins theory. This model provides a framework to quantify the balance between entropy and enthalpy during mixing. It illustrates how this balance changes during polymerization, potentially triggering spontaneous phase separation.
As the polymer chains grow during polymerization, N increases, thus reducing the entropy of mixing. This is because the long polymer chains have fewer configurational possibilities compared to individual monomers, thereby reducing disorder, which can be intuitively understood by Figure 1.
The total free energy change of mixing is given by:
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In the Flory-Huggins framework, the enthalpic contribution is modeled using the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter , yielding the total free energy per lattice site:
where for polymer solutions, and resulting in the Flory-Huggins equation for polymer solutions:
This equation combines the entropic penalty for mixing polymers (the first two terms in the equation) with the enthalpic preference or repulsion between species (the last term with ). A positive indicates unfavorable interactions (driving phase separation), while a negative favors mixing.
The parameter arises from the mean-field approximations of pairwise interactions on a lattice. Considering nearest-neighbor interactions , the average interaction energy of mixing per lattice site becomes:
This leads to:
Phase separation occurs when the mixed system becomes thermodynamically unstable. This is evaluated via the second derivative of the free energy with respect to composition:
This can be intuitively understood by picturing the free energy as an energy landscape in which systems roll downhill to lower the free energy:
During PIPS, as polymer chains grow (N increases), the entropic terms shrink and the system becomes increasingly dominated by enthalpic contributions. This evolution of the free energy landscape makes the system more likely to undergo phase separation.
The onset of instability occurs when:
This is the unstable, phase-separating condition. As polymerization occurs, approaches , thus promoting spontaneous phase separation. Therefore, at small values of , is convex, meaning the system is stable and prefers a single homogeneous phase. As increases, the entropic term becomes dominated by the enthalpic term as a consequence of chain connectivity, and mixing becomes thermodynamically unfavorable. Spontaneous phase separation occurs to reduce the system's total free energy.
PIPS occurs due to the evolving thermodynamic energy landscape during polymerization. As polymer chains grow:
While the Flory-Huggins model provides a strong starting point for understanding PIPS, it does not fully capture the true nature of this process. Its limitations stem from:
For more comprehensive models of PIPS, researchers often use the Flory-Huggins as a base model and further expand it with:
The morphology of the final phase separated structures are generally random owing to the stochastic nature of the onset and process of phase separation. Several approaches have been investigated to control morphology. Tran-Cong-Miyata and co-workers using periodic irradiation in photoreactive polymer blends to control morphology, specifically width of the resultant spinodal modes in the phase separated morphology. Li and co-workers employed holography, a process of holographic polymerization, in to order to direct the phase separated structure to have the same patterns as the holographic field. Recently, Hosein and co-workers demonstrated that nonlinear optical pattern formations that occur in photopolymer systems may be used to direct the organization of blends to have the same morphology as the light pattern.
The process is commonly used in control of the morphology of polymer blends, for applications in thermoelectrics, solid-state lighting, polymer electrolytes, composites, membrane formation, and surface pattern formations.