Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles

The creation of functional papers requires a specific deposition of chemical moieties at the surface. In particular, water-repellent barrier coatings can be formed by the deposition of (poly(styrene-co-maleimide) nanoparticles filled with different vegetable oils. The analysis of coated paper surfac...

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Main Author: Pieter Samyn
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-04-01
Series:Coatings
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/8/5/154
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spelling doaj-b1ed97e37972467f903dca19c9c68f272020-11-24T23:58:41ZengMDPI AGCoatings2079-64122018-04-018515410.3390/coatings8050154coatings8050154Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic NanoparticlesPieter Samyn0Applied and Analytical Chemistry, Institute for Materials Research (IMO-IMOMEC), University of Hasselt, B-3590 Diepenbeek, BelgiumThe creation of functional papers requires a specific deposition of chemical moieties at the surface. In particular, water-repellent barrier coatings can be formed by the deposition of (poly(styrene-co-maleimide) nanoparticles filled with different vegetable oils. The analysis of coated paper surfaces by dispersive Raman spectroscopy allows for statistical classification of different coating types and chemical mapping of the lateral surface distribution of the coating components. The Raman spectra were used to quantify the amount of free oil and imide content. The partial least squares model with three principal components (PC) could differentiate between the type of oil (degree of saturation in PC-1), coating thickness (cellulose bands of paper substrate in PC-2), and organic coating phase (styrene, imide in PC-3). The chemical surface maps with average intensities indicate coating inhomogeneities for thin coatings located near the organic coating components, while the presence of free oil acts as a natural binder in between the organic phase and provides a more homogeneous coating. Depending on the type of oil, a higher amount of free oil coincides with lower imide content at the surface. The surface coverage of polyunsaturated oils overlaps relatively well with the areas of organic coating components, as the oil is largely encapsulated. The surface coverage for mono- and unsaturated oils is rather complementary to the organic phase as there are larger amounts of free oil. The latter is confirmed by single wavenumber maps and image processing constructing composite chemical surface maps.http://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/8/5/154papercoatingsurfaceRamanmicroscopymapping
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pieter Samyn
spellingShingle Pieter Samyn
Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
Coatings
paper
coating
surface
Raman
microscopy
mapping
author_facet Pieter Samyn
author_sort Pieter Samyn
title Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
title_short Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
title_full Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
title_fullStr Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
title_full_unstemmed Raman Microscopy for Classification and Chemical Surface Mapping of Barrier Coatings on Paper with Oil-Filled Organic Nanoparticles
title_sort raman microscopy for classification and chemical surface mapping of barrier coatings on paper with oil-filled organic nanoparticles
publisher MDPI AG
series Coatings
issn 2079-6412
publishDate 2018-04-01
description The creation of functional papers requires a specific deposition of chemical moieties at the surface. In particular, water-repellent barrier coatings can be formed by the deposition of (poly(styrene-co-maleimide) nanoparticles filled with different vegetable oils. The analysis of coated paper surfaces by dispersive Raman spectroscopy allows for statistical classification of different coating types and chemical mapping of the lateral surface distribution of the coating components. The Raman spectra were used to quantify the amount of free oil and imide content. The partial least squares model with three principal components (PC) could differentiate between the type of oil (degree of saturation in PC-1), coating thickness (cellulose bands of paper substrate in PC-2), and organic coating phase (styrene, imide in PC-3). The chemical surface maps with average intensities indicate coating inhomogeneities for thin coatings located near the organic coating components, while the presence of free oil acts as a natural binder in between the organic phase and provides a more homogeneous coating. Depending on the type of oil, a higher amount of free oil coincides with lower imide content at the surface. The surface coverage of polyunsaturated oils overlaps relatively well with the areas of organic coating components, as the oil is largely encapsulated. The surface coverage for mono- and unsaturated oils is rather complementary to the organic phase as there are larger amounts of free oil. The latter is confirmed by single wavenumber maps and image processing constructing composite chemical surface maps.
topic paper
coating
surface
Raman
microscopy
mapping
url http://www.mdpi.com/2079-6412/8/5/154
work_keys_str_mv AT pietersamyn ramanmicroscopyforclassificationandchemicalsurfacemappingofbarriercoatingsonpaperwithoilfilledorganicnanoparticles
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