Abstract
All polymers exhibit gas permeability through the free volume of entangled polymer chains. However, two-dimensional (2D) materials including graphene stack densely and can exhibit molecular impermeability. Solution-synthesized 2D polymers that exhibit the latter by poly-condensation have been a longstanding goal. Herein, we demonstrate self-supporting, spin-coated 2D polyaramid nanofilms that exhibit nitrogen permeability below 3.1E-9 Barrer, roughly 6500-fold lower than existing polymers, and similar for other gases. Optical interference during the pressurization of nanofilm-coated microwells allows measurement of mechanosensitive rim opening and sealing, creating gas-filled bulges stable exceeding 3 years. This discovery enables 2D polymer resonators with high resonance frequencies (~8 MHz) and Q factors up to 537, similar to graphene. A 60-nm coating of air-sensitive perovskites reduces the lattice degradation rate 14-fold with an oxygen permeability of 3.3E-8 Barrer. Molecularly impermeable polymers promise the next generation of barrier materials that utilize exceedingly little polymer to maximize chemical rejection, ultimately contributing to sustainable materials development.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Materials for "A Molecularly Impermeable Polymer from Two-Dimensional Polyaramids"
Description
Materials and Methods; Supplementary Text; Figs. S1 to S31; Tables S1 to S2; References
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