The addition of hard fillers to a
polymer matrix is a well-known
process for achieving mechanical reinforcement. With a decrease in
the size of the fillers, the contribution from polymer–particle
nanometer-sized interfaces becomes significant, and these interfaces
affect the mechanical performance of polymer nanocomposites (PNCs)
beyond the limits established for conventional composites. However,
the molecular mechanisms underlying the improvement in the mechanical
performance of glassy PNCs remain unresolved, necessitating a deeper
understanding of the structure–property relationships in these
intrinsically heterogeneous systems. In this effort, by using Brillouin
light scattering (BLS) and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), we demonstrated
that adding shorter chains to a PNC prepared with high molecular weight
polymers significantly improved the mechanical properties of the PNC
in the glassy state. The strongest enhancement of mechanical properties
occurred at an optimum concentration of short chains. This is in contrast
to the behavior of the glass transition temperature of PNCs which
shows a monotonic decrease with an increase in the concentration of
shorter chains. Using experimental data and coarse-grained molecular
dynamics (MD) simulations, we have identified the molecular mechanism
leading to the observed nonmonotonic changes in mechanical reinforcement.
This mechanism includes changes in the nanoscale organization at the
interface combined with chain stretching amplified by the addition
of the short chains. Overall, our approach paves a simple and cost-effective
pathway to fabricating glassy PNCs with significantly improved mechanical
properties that will fill various practical needs.