An integrated approach, involving the use of a number of analytical techniques, was used to study
polymer coating network development during photopolymerization of a series of fast reacting, low modulus coating
formulations containing urethane/acrylate oligomers and acrylic comonomers. Real-time UV rheology measurements, to assess the development of viscoelastic properties, and real-time FTIR, to assess the disappearance of
acrylic groups, were used to study the early stages of the photocuring reaction up to the gel point. These results
showed that the development of the cross-linked network and the rate at which acrylate double bonds reacted
were not necessarily directly proportional as might be expected and were dependent upon the structures of the
urethane/acrylate oligomer and comonomers comprising a particular coating. Samples of partially polymerized
coatings were also prepared having degrees of acrylate conversion ranging from ∼50% through full conversion.
Analysis of the amount of extractable material and the molecular weight distribution of soluble oligomeric material
as a function of degree of conversion also showed a dependence upon the coating formulation components. In
some cases the extraction results for intermediate cure level samples could be correlated to the reactivity trends
observed in the early stages of the curing reaction. We also made use of solid-state NMR 1H T
2 relaxation
measurements to assess both partially and fully reacted films. The rate of magnetization decay correlated well
with both the developing level of cross-link density as the degree of polymerization increased and also with the
theoretical cross-link densities expected for the fully cured networks based on the structure of the coating
formulation components. The latter also correlated well with modulus measurements made on fully cured coating
film samples.
We review recent progress on reduced coating diameter fibers for increasing core density for optical interconnect applications. We discuss design considerations on microbending and mechanical reliability and present new experimental results.
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