Abstract :
Surface properties of a Melinex 800 PET polymer material modified by an atmospheric-pressure air dielectric barrier discharge (DBD) have
been studied using X-ray photoelectron microscopy (XPS) and contact angle measurement. The results show that the material surface treated by the
DBD was modified significantly in chemical composition, with the highly oxidised carbon species increasing as the surface processing proceeds.
The surface hydrophilicity was dramatically improved after the treatment, with the surface contact angle reduced from 81.88 for the as-supplied
sample to lower than 508 after treatment. Post-treatment recovery effect is found after the treated samples were stored in air for a long period of
time, with the ultimate contact angles, as measured, being stabilised in the range 58–698 after the storage, varying with the DBD-treatment power
density. A great amount of the C–O type bonding formed during the DBD treatment was found to be converted into the C O type during posttreatment
storage. A possible mechanism for this bond conversion has been suggested
Keywords :
PET , X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy , Dielectric barrier discharge , Surface modification