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Photodeposition of amorphous polydiacetylene films from monomer solutions onto transparent substrates by Paley, M. S.

Book Information

TitlePhotodeposition of amorphous polydiacetylene films from monomer solutions onto transparent substrates
CreatorPaley, M. S., Frazier, D. O., Abdeldeyem, H., Armstrong, S., McManus, S. P
Year1995
PPI400
LanguageEnglish
Mediatypetexts
SubjectOZONE DEPLETION, POLLUTION TRANSPORT, REACTION KINETICS, ATMOSPHERIC MODELS, CHEMICAL ANALYSIS, STRATOSPHERE, PHOTOCHEMICAL REACTIONS, ATMOSPHERIC CHEMISTRY, AIR POLLUTION, NITROGEN OXIDES, HALOGEN COMPOUNDS, ATMOSPHERIC COMPOSITION, HYDROXYL RADICALS
Collectionnasa_techdocs
Uploadergwilliam
Identifiernasa_techdoc_19960016978
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Description

Polydiacetylenes are a very promising class of polymers for both photonic and electronic applications because of their highly conjugated structures. For these applications, high-quality thin polydiacetylene films are required. We have discovered a novel technique for obtaining such films of a polydiacetylene derivative of 2-methyl-4-nitroaniline using photodeposition from monomer solutions onto UV transparent substrates. This heretofore unreported process yields amorphous polydiacetylene films with thicknesses on the order of I micron that have optical quality superior to that of films grown by standard crystal growth techniques. Furthermore, these films exhibit good third-order nonlinear optical susceptibilities; degenerate four-wave mixing experiments give x(3) values on the order of 10(exp -8) - 10(exp -7) esu. We have conducted masking experiments which demonstrate that photodeposition occurs only where the substrate is directly irradiated, clearly indicating that the reaction occurs at the surface. Additionally, we have also been able to carry out photodeposition using lasers to form thin polymer circuits. In this work, we discuss the photodeposition of polydiacetylene thin films from solution, perform chemical characterization of these films, investigate the role of the substrate, speculate on the mechanism of the reaction, and make a preliminary determination of the third-order optical nonlinearity of the films. This simple, straightforward technique may ultimately make feasible the production of polydiacetylene thin films for technological applications.