Back to search results

PhD Studentship: The Physics of Polymer Glasses in Confined Geometries and in the Bulk

University of Leeds - Physics & Astronomy, Faculty of Engineering & Physical Sciences, University of Leeds

Qualification Type: PhD
Location: Leeds
Funding for: UK Students
Funding amount: £19,237 per year for 3.5 years
Hours: Full Time
Placed On: 13th March 2024
Closes: 29th April 2024

The formation and behaviour of glassy disordered solids is one of the deepest unsolved questions in physics, as demonstrated by the seminal contributions to the problem by the 2021 Nobel laureate in physics, Giorgio Parisi.

The formation and behaviour of glassy disordered non-equilibrium solids is one of the deepest unsolved questions in physics, as demonstrated by the seminal contributions to the problem by the 2021 Nobel laureate in physics, Giorgio Parisi. The fact that neither the microscopic mechanisms involved in glass formation, nor the behaviour of the glassy state, are well understood makes this a key problem both within the fundamental and applied sciences.

For long-chain molecules – polymers – our present understanding of glass-formation is particularly poor due to the complexity provided both by chain connectivity and chain flexibility; this means that the molecular motions linked to glass-formation involves an intricate interplay between intra- and inter-molecular molecular cooperativity [1]. In turn, this leads to fascinating observations including polymer-specific memory behaviour observed in the slow evolution (aging) of the out-of-equilibrium glassy state, and polymer-specific transport of ions important for the construction of safe and flexible polymer-based battery materials. Generally, polymer glasses are common for instance in construction materials, in medical implants, in optical components and in membranes for controlled transport of ions or gases. Thus, understanding polymer glass-formation directly impacts our ability to design better or totally new polymer-based applications.

Polymers in restricted geometries, such as in thin polymer films, often show dramatic changes in behaviour, which are not well understood. This include a remarkable reduction in the glass transition temperature of ~70 K for thin free standing polystyrene films [2]. The high surface-to-volume ratio of thin films means that interfacial interactions play a strong role and the change in molecular motions at the interfaces are transferred to the film interior; we do not presently understand how this transfer takes place. Thin film polymers are highly important for coatings, in microelectronics, and in a wide array of nanotechnology applications. For the development of better, and more sustainable, technologies of the future, it is thus essential to understand how geometric confinement changes the behaviour of polymers. 

To address these questions, detailed experimental studies of model polymers both in thin film geometries and in the bulk are needed. Advanced experimental techniques including broadband dielectric spectroscopy, ellipsometry, calorimetry, (light, neutron and x-ray) scattering, rheology, and atomic force microscopy will be used to investigate both thin polymer films and the corresponding bulk polymers. We have recently [1] proposed a new framework for understanding polymer glass-formation, whereby the `local’ molecular motions are coupled to longer-range structural relaxations through so-called `Dynamic Facilitation’. These ideas, and their implications for the behaviour of both bulk polymers and thin polymer films will be investigated. In addition, we are interested in determining how the generated fundamental knowledge can be utilised in relevant important appllications.

You will work in an international research environment characterized by close collaborations between experimentalists and theorists and an inspiring mix of fundamental and applied research.

[1] Baker, D., Reynolds, M., Masurel, R., Olmsted, P.D., Mattsson, J., Phys. Rev. X 12, 021047 (2022). [2] Mattsson, J., Forrest, J.A., Börjesson, L., Phys. Rev. E 62, 5187 (2000).

Please state your entry requirements plus any necessary or desired background

First or Upper Second Class UK Bachelor (Honours) or equivalent

We value your feedback on the quality of our adverts. If you have a comment to make about the overall quality of this advert, or its categorisation then please send us your feedback
Advert information

Type / Role:

Subject Area(s):

Location(s):

PhD tools
 

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Ok Ok

PhD Alert Created

Job Alert Created

Your PhD alert has been successfully created for this search.

Your job alert has been successfully created for this search.

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Account Verification Missing

In order to create multiple job alerts, you must first verify your email address to complete your account creation

Request verification email Request verification email

jobs.ac.uk Account Required

In order to create multiple alerts, you must create a jobs.ac.uk jobseeker account

Create Account Create Account

Alert Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your account is currently blocked. Please login to unblock your account.

Email Address Blocked

We received a delivery failure message when attempting to send you an email and therefore your email address has been blocked. You will not receive job alerts until your email address is unblocked. To do so, please choose from one of the two options below.

Max Alerts Reached

A maximum of 5 Job Alerts can be created against your account. Please remove an existing alert in order to create this new Job Alert

Manage your job alerts Manage your job alerts

Creation Failed

Unfortunately, your alert was not created at this time. Please try again.

Ok Ok

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

Create PhD Alert

Create Job Alert

When you create this PhD alert we will email you a selection of PhDs matching your criteria.When you create this job alert we will email you a selection of jobs matching your criteria. Our Terms and Conditions and Privacy Policy apply to this service. Any personal data you provide in setting up this alert is processed in accordance with our Privacy Notice

 
 
 
More PhDs from University of Leeds

Show all PhDs for this organisation …

More PhDs like this
Join in and follow us

Browser Upgrade Recommended

jobs.ac.uk has been optimised for the latest browsers.

For the best user experience, we recommend viewing jobs.ac.uk on one of the following:

Google Chrome Firefox Microsoft Edge