Nanoporous Cyanate Ester Resins: Structure-Gas Transport Property Relationships

Nanoscale Res Lett. 2017 Dec;12(1):305. doi: 10.1186/s11671-017-2071-3. Epub 2017 Apr 26.

Abstract

This contribution addresses the relationships between the structure and gas transport properties of nanoporous thermostable cyanate ester resins (CERs) derived from polycyclotrimerization of 1,1'-bis(4-cyanatophenyl)ethane in the presence of 30 or 50 wt% of inert high-boiling temperature porogens (i.e., dimethyl- or dibutyl phthalates), followed by their quantitative removal. The nanopores in the films obtained were generated via a chemically induced phase separation route with further porogen extraction from the densely crosslinked CERs. To ensure a total desorption of the porogen moieties from the networks, an additional short-term thermal annealing at 250 °C was performed. The structure and morphology of such nanoporous CER-based films were investigated by FTIR and SEM techniques, respectively. Further, the gas transport properties of CER films were analyzed after the different processing steps, and relationships between the material structure and the main gas transport parameters were established.

Keywords: Cyanate ester resins; Gas diffusion; Gas solubility; Nanoporous thermosets; Transport properties.