Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members:...

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Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors: Dr. Earl Ryba, Kevin Gallagher - PPG Industries

Transcript of Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members:...

Page 1: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Combinatorial Chemistry

High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials

Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors: Dr. Earl Ryba, Kevin Gallagher - PPG Industries

Page 2: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Project Statement

• Develop a high-throughput process that employs the principles of combinatorial chemistry to dramatically reduce the time and labor required to evaluate the durability of new resins and coatings, specifically abrasion resistant clear coatings on a polycarbonate substrate.

Page 3: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Goals

• Research combinatorial chemistry and high-throughput methods to present a means of drastically increasing productivity and efficiency

Page 4: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Goals

• Research combinatorial chemistry and high-throughput methods to present a means of drastically increasing productivity and efficiency

• Reduce cost and increase profit through miniaturization of sample size and increased coating discovery rate

Page 5: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Combinatorial Chemistry

• Miniaturization and automation yield high-throughput experimentation

• Decreased sample size• Processes almost completely automated

Page 6: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Combinatorial Chemistry

• Miniaturization and automation yield high-throughput experimentation

• Decreased sample size• Processes almost completely automated• Quantitative analysis of data• All steps linked to central database

• Self-updating processes

• Easy to use• Reliable and versatile

Page 7: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Automation of Production and Testing

• Faster formulation of wide array of coatings

• Fast, accurate, and quantitative testing

Page 8: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Automation of Production and Testing

• Faster formulation of wide array of coatings

• Fast, accurate, and quantitative testing• Immediate data feedback to central

database• Enables coatings to be produced and

tested at rates > 100x conventional methods

Page 9: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

The Combinatorial Factory

• Formulation of coatings• Creation of coating arrays• Preliminary screening

• Optical, abrasion, and adhesion testing• Secondary screening

• Weathering• Integrity evaluation

• Larger scale testing to meet industry specifications

Page 10: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Schematic of The Combinatorial Factory

Capable of screening 100 to 200 coatings per day

Page 11: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Formulation and Creation of Arrays

Page 12: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Formulation and Creation of Arrays

• Easily accomplished with robot mixing technology

• Quickly create arrays with formulations of varying composition and thickness• Rates of > 1 array/2 hours

• Coating and curing accomplished at rates > 1 array/hour

Page 13: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

The Array• Polycarbonate base

film, 0.5-mm thick• 6x8 array of

coatings• each sample is 2-5-

μm thick and 10-mm in diameter

• Flexible silicon rubber template to create wells

Page 14: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Spin Casting• Positive aspects

• Coating can be leveled after array creation

• Allows for very diverse library of coatings to be produced on substrate

Page 15: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Spin Casting• Positive aspects

• Coating can be leveled after array creation

• Allows for very diverse library of coatings to be produced on substrate

• Problems arise after array creation• Meniscus

• Differential evaporation

• Coffee ring effect

Page 16: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Spin Casting

Page 17: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Leveling and Curing the Array• Coatings leveled via

horizontal centrifuge at 2000-3000 rpms

• Curing can take place separately by UV, thermal, as necessary

Page 18: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Problems during leveling• Problems arise due

to meniscus and air flow in centrifuge

Page 19: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Problems during leveling• Problems arise due

to meniscus and air flow in centrifuge• At 2000 rpms, air

speeds reach up to 60 mph

• Heavy air flow causes differential evaporation and coffee ring effect

Page 20: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

The Meniscus and Air Flow

Page 21: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

The Effect of Covered Wells

• Cover well with permeable layer• Solvent can still

evaporate• Air flow from above

no longer affects samples

Page 22: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Conquering Differential Evaporation

• Hole in center of permeable layer allows solvent in center to evaporate at rate equal to that at well edges

• Consistent evaporation eliminates liquid flow to well walls

Page 23: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

The Result

Page 24: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Primary

Secondary

Page 25: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Multilevel Performance Screening• 1st stage screening

• Test optical clarity, abrasion resistance, and adhesion

• Eliminates ~ 90% of samples• 2nd stage screening

• Test weatherability, integrity, gloss, and surface smoothness

• Rapidly identify coating samples with desired properties• Candidates for scale up• Test according to the customer’s

specifications

Page 26: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Multilevel Performance Screening

• 1st stage• 100-200 samples per day

• 2nd stage• ~10% of the samples

• Rapidly identified materials

• Candidates for scale up

Page 27: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Conventional Methods

Property Measurement Method

Optical Clarity % Haze (ASTM D1003)

Abrasion Resistance Taber Abrasion (ASTM D1044)

Adhesion Crosshatch Adhesion (ASTM 3359)

Weatherability Accelerated Weathering (ASTM G26)

Page 28: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Primary: Optical Clarity

Page 29: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Optical Clarity

• Crucial property – clear coating on polycarbonate, needs to be able to replace glass

• First screening of samples – immediately eliminate some

• Corresponds to the absence of light scattering

• Later screenings optimized for up to 30% haze

Page 30: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Optical Clarity• Fiber optic probe – measures intensity

of 360o back-scattered light

Page 31: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Optical Clarity

• Maximum intensity = optical clarity• Lower intensity higher optical clarity• Relate percent haze to scattered light:

• S2 = SK/(1 + 100/H)

• S2 = scattered light

• S = transmitted light + scattered light• K = constant, relates methods• H = percent haze

Page 32: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Optical Clarity• Valid method? Yes!

Correlation shown between scattered light intensity from the high-throughput method to percentage of haze of reference materials.

Page 33: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Primary: Abrasion Resistance

Page 34: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Abrasion Resistance• Basic factor in durability• Caused by mechanical actions, such as

rubbing, scraping, or erosion from wind and water

• Related to other physical characteristics• Hardness• Cohesive and tensile strength• Elasticity• Toughness

Page 35: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Samples:• 10 mm diameter• 2-5 μm thick• 8x6 arrays of 48 coatings on polycarbonate

substrate• Abrasion methods;

• Air blast test• Oscillating sand test

Page 36: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Air Blast Abrasive Test:• 50 μm Al2O3 particles

• Constant pressure and flow rate• Nozzle with 1 mm diameter opening• Sheet advanced automatically, 15 cm/min• Change distance of nozzle to coating from

2.5 to 10 cm, 1.25 cm increments

Page 37: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Oscillating Sand Test

• 1,000 ml sand on array in container

• Oscillate container for set amount of time

• Vary level of abrasion by changing time: 10 min, 20 min, 30 min

Page 38: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test• Sample analysis: spectroscopic measurements

of scattered light. • Less scattered light = better abrasion resistance.

Page 39: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Spectroscopic system:• White light source• Monochromator

• Selection of illumination wavelength• Light focused into fiber-optic probe

Page 40: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Spectroscopic system:• White light source• Monochromator

• Selection of illumination wavelength• Light focused into fiber-optic probe

• Portable spectrometer• 600-grooves/mm grating blazed at 400 nm • Spectral range: 250-800 nm• Linear CCD-array detector

Page 41: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test• Excitation wavelength set at 500 nm

(0 order of monochromator)• Setup optimized for samples with up to

30% haze• Probe angle – highest change in detector

response over range of measured haze• Distance from probe to coating – ideal spot

size ~4-6 mm• Spectral acquisition conditions

Page 42: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test

• Minimal contributions from light directly reflected back from coating into probe

• Just collect diffusively reflected portion of radiation interacting with coating surface

Page 43: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Abrasion Test• Valid method? Yes!

Correlation shown between the high-throughput method and the Taber abrasion method for abrasion resistance determination.

Page 44: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Data Acquisition Programs

• Programs constructed using LabView• National Instruments

• Kaleidagraph• Synergy Software

• Programs constructed using MatLab• The Mathworks Inc.

Page 45: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Primary: Adhesion

Page 46: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion

• Occurs when interfacial and intermolecular forces hold two surfaces together

Page 47: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion

• Occurs when interfacial and intermolecular forces hold two surfaces together

• Measuring: corresponds to the forces or work required to terminate the adhering system

Page 48: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion

• Occurs when interfacial and intermolecular forces hold two surfaces together

• Measuring: corresponds to the forces or work required to terminate the adhering system

• Quantified through a micro scratch test using a blade-like indenter

Page 49: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation

• Indenter positioned with a selected angle of attack between the front side and the coating surface

Blade-like micro scratch indenter with a sharp angle between edge RE and the front side, and rounded angle γ with radius R1.

Page 50: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation

• Indenter positioned with a selected angle of attack between the front side and the coating surface

• Drawn across surface with constant or progressively increasing load

Blade-like micro scratch indenter with a sharp angle between edge RE and the front side, and rounded angle γ with radius R1.

Page 51: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation• Simultaneous

measurements of indenter-surface interactions taken to detect the critical load• Mechanical• Acoustical• Electrical

Blade-like micro scratch indenter in the direction of arrow A in previous figure, with the front attack angle, α, and the back attack angle, β. Arrow B shows the direction of movement.

Page 52: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation• Simultaneous

measurements of indenter-surface interactions taken to detect the critical load• Mechanical• Acoustical• Electrical

• Characterize scratch and adhesion resistance

Blade-like micro scratch indenter in the direction of arrow A in previous figure, with the front attack angle, α, and the back attack angle, β. Arrow B shows the direction of movement.

Page 53: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation

• Tungsten-carbide indenter• Hard• Conductive (measure electric contact

resistance)

• No problems with stress in substrate

Page 54: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Adhesion Evaluation

• Tungsten-carbide indenter• Hard• Conductive (measure electric contact

resistance)• No problems with stress in substrate• Works for clear, non clear, plastic, and

metal substrates• Works for multi-layer coating systems

Page 55: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Secondary: Weathering

Page 56: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering

• Similar to current method used by PPG

Key Components:

• Weatherometer

• Automated measurement system

Page 57: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering

• Sample: 8x6 arrays

• Weathering test• Weatherometer equipped with Xenon Lamp with inner and outer filters

Page 58: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering• Sample: 8x6 arrays

• Weathering test• Weatherometer equipped with Xenon Lamp with inner and outer filters• Weather cycle consists of:

• 160 min of light (air temp. 45oC, black panel temp. 70oC, 50% relative humidity)

• 5 min dark and 15 min of dark and water spray (air temp. 20oC, 100% relative humidity)

Page 59: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering

• Weatherometer: accelerates process to approximately 8-fold over that in Miami, FL.

Page 60: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering

• Weatherometer: accelerates process to approximately 8-fold over that in Miami, FL.

• Samples must be subjected to at least 2000 kJ/m2 at 340 nm of UV exposure in the weatherometer for sufficient weathering

Page 61: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Weathering

• Weatherometer: accelerates process to approximately 8-fold over that in Miami, FL.

• Samples must be subjected to at least 2000 kJ/m2 at 340 nm of UV exposure in the weatherometer for sufficient weathering

• Automated measurement system – generates quantitative data to database.

Page 62: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Secondary: Integrity

Page 63: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Integrity Evaluation

• Yellowness index (YI) measurements• Deuterium-halogen light source, transmission probe, and portable spectrometer • Measured over spectral range from 250-800

nm • Calculates YI value from absorbance values

in 400-500 nm range

Page 64: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Integrity Evaluation

• Yellowness index (YI) measurements• Deuterium-halogen light source, transmission probe, and portable spectrometer • Measured over spectral range from 250-800

nm • Calculates YI value from absorbance values

in 400-500 nm range• Higher absorbance values higher

yellowness index values

Page 65: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Integrity Evaluation• Integrity

Measurements• Halogen 60-W lamp

uniformly illuminates the array

• CCD detector collects images of individual coatings for evaluation

• LABView used for image analysis

Spectroscopic system used for YI and integrity

evaluation

Page 66: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Integrity Evaluation

• Images of modes of degredation• A) Good condition• B) Crack formation• C) Void formation• D) Delamination

• after 1738 kJ/m2 exposure

Page 67: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Screening

Secondary: Gloss, Surface Smoothness

Page 68: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Gloss• Gloss: specular, or mirror-like, reflection of

white light from a surface• White light source is filtered spectrum

similar to the response of the human eye• Hand-held gloss meters are used with flat

and curved surfaces for determining the surface finish of polymer products and painted surfaces for quality control purposes

Page 69: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Gloss

• Gloss meters provide quantitative data on the uniformity and quality of surface treatments

• Are relatively insensitive to vibrations.

Page 70: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Surface Smoothness• Surface topography contributes

mechanical adhesion• Statistical parameters are obtained

from the surface profiles

Page 71: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Surface Smoothness• Surface topography contributes

mechanical adhesion• Statistical parameters are obtained

from the surface profiles• Most common parameters used:

• Ra = average roughness deviation

• Rq = root mean square roughness deviation

• (equations 1 and 2)

Eqn 1: Eqn 2:

Page 72: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Surface Smoothness• Non-contact (or optical) profilometers (laser

triangulation systems and optical interferometers) measure 3-D surface topography and roughness.

• Surface reflectivity measured with a reflectometer.

• Beam of light (either filtered white light as used for gloss meters or laser) projected onto the target surface at a specific angle

• Amount of light reflected at the same angle is measured.

Page 73: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Surface Smoothness• Surface roughness causes incident light to

be scattered at angles other than that of specular reflection scatter increases with roughness.

Schematic of surface reflectivity measurement.

Page 74: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Other Considerations

Laser Induced Decohesion Spectroscopy (LIDS) & Multi-Lens Combinatorial Adhesion Test (MCAT)

Page 75: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Laser Induced Decohesion Spectroscopy (LIDS)

• Possible method of adhesion evaluation• Photothermal ablation is directed onto

the sample • Produces an internal pressure between

the clear coating and a non-clear coating or substrate

Page 76: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

LIDS• Possible method of adhesion evaluation• Photothermal ablation is directed onto the

sample • Produces an internal pressure between the

clear coating and a non-clear coating or substrate

• Internal pressure creates a blister at the transparent/nontransparent interface

• The blister's internal pressure depends on the laser pulse energy

Page 77: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

LIDS

• Blister expands radially into unablated regions, causing sample to fail at a critical pressure

• Measure of curvature, radius, and thickness of the blister determine the critical pressure

• Critical internal pressure used to quantify adhesion strength

Page 78: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Multi-Lens Combinatorial Adhesion Test (MCAT)

• Developed to measure adhesion across a library in a high throughput fashion

• Utilizes an array of microlenses to conduct adhesion measurements across a sample

Page 79: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

MCAT

• The contact area between the array and the substrate is visualized with a Leica DM IRE2 inverted microscope and measured with Image Pro software

• Labview software is used to record the actuator position and load data during an experiment

Page 80: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

MCAT

• Multi-lens arrays may be fabricated to contain anywhere from 100 up to 1000 or even 8100 individual lenses over an area of 1 cm2

Page 81: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Draw backs for MCAT

• The volume of data collected during each evaluation of a new sample library

Page 82: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Summary

Page 83: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Process

• Application: Robot technology and spin casting to create 6x8 arrays of coating samples

• Spectroscopic determination of optical clarity and abrasion resistance

• Microscratch test with blade-like indenter for adhesion quantification

Page 84: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Process

• Weathering in xenon arc weatherometer• Spectroscopic determination of

yellowness index and coating integrity

Page 85: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

High-Throughput Process

• Weathering in xenon arc weatherometer• Spectroscopic determination of

yellowness index and coating integrity• Quantification of gloss and surface

smoothness• Self-updating computer database

Page 86: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Advantages of Combi Chem and High-Throughput Methods

• Automated, reliable processes• Quantitative analysis• Comprehensive database

Page 87: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Advantages of Combi Chem and High-Throughput Methods

• Automated, reliable processes• Quantitative analysis• Comprehensive database• Test more samples in shorter period of

time• Minimize cost per sample• Better coatings, faster!

Page 88: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

GE’s results

• Combinatorial factory capable of preparing and evaluating ~100-200 coatings/day (2-4 arrays).

• Productivity improvement of at least 10x!• Measurement throughput improvement

of at least 20x!• (same number of chemists!)

Page 89: Combinatorial Chemistry High-Throughput Methods for Developing New Materials Group Members: Christopher Gold, Melissa Lackey, Chih-Fang Liu, Ryan Wu Advisors:

Thank you!Questions or

comments?