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Facile method for fabricating atomic oxygen resistant polyimide films with excellent optical homogeneity containing hyperbranched polysiloxane.

Authors :
Lv, Gang
Xie, Songpei
Mao, Danbo
Ren, Ge
Wu, Shibin
Yang, Wei
Source :
High Performance Polymers. Oct2021, Vol. 33 Issue 8, p924-937. 14p.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Mechanically robust optical homogeneous polyimide (PI) films with desirable atomic oxygen (AO) erosion duration were fabricated by initially synthesizing amine-functionalized hyperbranched polysiloxane (NH2-HBPSi), then reinforcing the pristine polyimide skeleton with it via copolycondensation reactions. NH2-HBPSi macromolecule imparts desirable AO survivability to the resulting hybrids. The mass loss per unit area of hybrid films had a downward trend with rising NH2-HBPSi content and AO dose before the complete silica protective layer was formed. It has been proven by the experiments in an underground simulated AO environment. It decreased to 1% of that of pristine polyimide when NH2-HBPSi accounted for 30% of the solid content after 24 h AO attack. The stable thickness uniformity that can meet the Rayleigh criterion was achieved in a 30 wt% HBPSi PI film, mainly due to the selection of the best process parameters. Meanwhile, 30 wt% HBPSi PI demonstrates satisfactory mechanical properties, with a tensile strength of 228.9 MPa and elongation at break of 7.3%. The characterization of scanning electron microscopy confirmed that pristine polyimide was substantially eroded after AO exposure while the surface morphology of 30 wt% HBPSi polyimide showed no evident change. The low AO erosion yield and prominent film thickness uniformity may find extensive usage in ultra-lightweight space diffractive optical elements (DOE) working in low earth orbit (LEO). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09540083
Volume :
33
Issue :
8
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
High Performance Polymers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
153180674
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1177/0954008320972783