Chain Flexibility and Structure of a Polyimide Copolymer: Revisiting the Freely Rotating Chain Model

NT Liesen and A Maiti and C Fox and GD Kosiba and RH Gee and MP Kroonblawd, MACROMOLECULES, 58, 6953-6970 (2025).

DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.5c00549

Poly(4-4 '-oxydiphenylene-pyromellitimide)-based polyimides-trade name Kapton-have wide-ranging engineering applications owing to their thermal and mechanical stability, but little is known about underlying chain- level characteristics. While theoretical models have conceptualized Kapton as inflexible polycyclic rods separated by freely rotating diphenyl ether hinge groups, the model's core predictions remain untested and subtleties of the relaxation behavior are missed, which atomistic modeling can resolve. To these ends, we examine all-atom Kapton structures in crystalline and glassy amorphous configurations using a DFT-validated class II force field. Constructing amorphous configurations is challenging, as the fused-ring-containing backbone has slow relaxation dynamics and scaling suggestive of entanglements even in oligomers. We find larger backbone rearrangements of the linear polycyclic segments about ether groups that are consistent with the rod- hinge picture on the monomer scale, whereas a ring rotation analysis suggests partially flexible rod-like segments and involves multiple facile rotational relaxation modes.

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