Microstructural variations of poly(vinylidene fluoride co-hexafluoropropylene) and their influence on the thermal, dielectric and piezoelectric properties (original) (raw)
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Electroactive macroporous poly[(vinylidene fluoride)-co-trifluoroethylene] membranes have been produced by solvent evaporation at room temperature, starting with a diluted solution of the copolymer in dimethylformamide. The pore architecture consists of interconnected spherical pores. This architecture is independent of the membrane thickness. The thickness of the membranes ranges from a few to several hundred mm, using spin coating and evaporation in static conditions, respectively. The pore structure is explained by a spinodal decomposition of the liquid/liquid phase separation and crystallization in the copolymer-rich phase.
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Materials, 2021
P(VdF-HFP) films are fabricated via a solution casting doctor blade method using high (HVS) and low (LVS) volatile solvents, respectively. The structural properties and the ferroelectric behavior are investigated. The surface structure and crystal phase composition are found to be strongly dependent on the type of solvent. LVS leads to a rougher copolymer surface structure with large spherulites and a lower crystallinity in contrast with HVS. The crystalline phase of copolymer films fabricated with HVS consists almost exclusively of α-phase domains, whereas films from LVS solution show a large proportion of γ-phase domains, as concluded from Raman and X-ray diffraction spectra. Virgin films show no ferroelectric (FE) switching polarization at electric field amplitudes below 180 MV/m, independent of the solvent type, observed in bipolar dielectric displacement—electric field measurements. After applying electric fields of above 180 MV/m, a FE behavior emerges, which is significantly ...