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1.
Copolyester was synthesized and characterized as having 89.9 mol % ethylene succinate units and 10.1 mol % butylene succinate units in a random sequence, as revealed by NMR. Isothermal crystallization kinetics was studied in the temperature range (Tc) from 30 to 73 °C using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The melting behavior after isothermal crystallization was investigated using DSC by varying the Tc, the heating rate and the crystallization time. DSC curves showed triple melting peaks. The melting behavior indicates that the upper melting peaks are associated primarily with the melting of lamellar crystals with various stabilities. As the Tc increases, the contribution of recrystallization slowly decreases and finally disappears. A Hoffman‐Weeks linear plot gives an equilibrium melting temperature of 107.0 °C. The spherulite growth of this copolyester from 80 to 20 °C at a cooling rate of 2 or 4 °C/min was monitored and recorded using an optical microscope equipped with a CCD camera. Continuous growth rates between melting and glass transition temperatures can be obtained after curve‐fitting procedures. These data fit well with those data points measured in the isothermal experiments. These data were analyzed with the Hoffman and Lauritzen theory. A regime II → III transition was detected at around 52 °C. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 46: 2431–2442, 2008  相似文献   

2.
The thermal stability of a short carbon-fiber-reinforced PEEK composite was assessed by thermogravimetry and by a Rheometrics dynamic analyzer. The results indicated that holding for 10 min at 380°C was a suitable melting condition to avoid the thermooxidative degradation under air. After proving that the heating rate of 50°C/min can be used to evaluate the crystallinity, a heating stage was used to prepare nonisothermally crystallized specimens using cooling rates from 1 to 100°C/min after melting at 400°C for 3 or 15 min. The degree of crystallinity and the melting behavior of these specimens were investigated by DSC at a heating rate of 50°C/min. The presence of three or four regions indicated that the upper melting temperature, Tm, changed with the crystallization temperature. The first region with the highest Tm, which corresponded to the cooling rate of 1°C/min, can be associated with the crystallization in regime II. There was a second region where Tm decreased as the amount of crystals formed in regime II decreased with increasing cooling rate from 5 to 20°C/min. The third region, a plateau region, corresponded to regime III condition in which the crystals were imperfect. In the fourth region, the cooling was so fast that crystallization was incomplete during the cooling for the melting condition of 400°C for 15 min. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J. Polym. Sci. B Polym. Phys. 36: 2225–2235, 1998  相似文献   

3.
This work describes the melting and polymorphic behavior of poly(decamethylene terephthalamide) (PA 10T). Both solution‐crystallized (SC) and melt‐crystallized (MC) PA 10T show double melting endotherms in DSC. The SC crystal form melts at 260–300°C giving the first melting endotherm, and meanwhile undergoes a polymorphic transition forming the MC crystal form. The subsequent melting of the MC crystal form gives the second melting endotherm at 300–325°C. This irreversible polymorphic transition is confirmed by variable‐temperature WAXD and IR. Dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) shows a glass transition temperature (Tg) at 127°C and the presence of an α′ transition at 203°C (0.1 and 1 Hz). This transition could be confirmed by DSC and variable‐temperature WAXD experiments. The α′ transition correlates with a reversible thermal process and a sudden change in intersheet spacing. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 2019 , 57, 465–472  相似文献   

4.
A semicrystalline ethylene‐hexene copolymer (PEH) was subjected to a simple thermal treatment procedure as follows: the sample was isothermally crystallized at a certain isothermal crystallization temperature from melt, and then was quenched in liquid nitrogen. Quintuple melting peaks could be observed in heating scan of the sample by using differential scanning calorimeter (DSC). Particularly, an intriguing endothermic peak (termed as Peak 0) was found to locate at about 45 °C. The multiple melting behaviors for this semicrystalline ethylene‐hexene copolymer were investigated in details by using DSC. Wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD) technique was applied to examine the crystal forms to provide complementary information for interpreting the multiple melting behaviors. Convincing results indicated that Peak 0 was due to the melting of crystals formed at room temperature from the much highly branched ethylene sequences. Direct heating scans from isothermal crystallization temperature (Tc, 104–118 °C) were examined for comparison, which indicated that the multiple melting behaviors depended on isothermal crystallization temperature and time. A triple melting behavior could be observed after a relatively short isothermal crystallization time at a low Tc (104–112 °C), which could be attributed to a combination of melting of two coexistent lamellar stack populations with different lamellar thicknesses and the melting‐recrystallization‐remelting (mrr) event. A dual melting behavior could be observed for isothermal crystallization with both a long enough time at a low Tc and a short or long time at an intermediate Tc (114 °C), which was ascribed to two different crystal populations. At a high Tc (116–118 °C), crystallizable ethylene sequences were so few that only one single broad melting peak could be observed. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 46: 2100–2115, 2008  相似文献   

5.
The crystallization behavior and morphology of polymerized cyclic butylene terephthalate (pCBT) were investigated by thermal differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and polarized light microscopy (PLM). The spherulite growth rate was analyzed based on the Hoffman and Lauritzen theory to better understand the crystallization behavior. We found four typical morphologic features of pCBT corresponding to the crystallization temperature spectrum: usual negative spherulite, unusual spherulite, mixed birefringence spherulite coexisting with boundary crystals, and highly disordered spherulitic crystallites. The Avrami crystallization kinetics confirmed the occurrence of combined heterogeneous nucleation accompanied by a change in the spherulitic shape of pCBT, which also agreed with the PLM results. The equilibrium melting temperature and glass transition temperature of pCBT were 257.8 °C and 41.1 °C, respectively. A regime II–III transition occurred at 200.9 °C, which was 10 °C lower than that reported for poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT). Coinciding with and attributed to the regime transition, the boundary crystal disappeared at temperatures above 200 °C and the morphology changed from the mixed type to highly disordered spherulitic crystallites. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 48: 1127–1134, 2010  相似文献   

6.
The melting behavior, crystallization behavior, and morphology of PBSR, which is Poly(butylene succinate) modified with rosin maleopimaric acid anhydride (RMA), were investigated with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and polarized optical microscope (POM). The multiple endotherms were ascribed to the recrystallization during DSC measurement and the equilibrium melting temperature determined by the Peak L, which was associated with the fusion of the crystals grown by normal primary crystallization, was 125.9 °C. After the kinetic parameters for isothermal crystallization of PBSR were determined by Avrami equation, to make a detailed regime transition analysis, the well‐established Lauritzen–Hoffman equation was employed. The results indicated that there were two regimes, regime II and regime III, in the range of higher and lower crystallization temperature, respectively. The regime transition temperature is about 81 °C. At last, the spherulitic morphologies of PBSR after being crystallized isothermally at different temperature were observed with the help of POM. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 2694–2704, 2005  相似文献   

7.
An optical microscope equipped with a video photograph system was used to follow the growth of spherulites. Under nitrogen atmosphere, the growth rates at 290 and 300°C suggest that when the melt of PEEK has been equilibrated for 15 min at 400°C, the subsequent crystallization behavior was nearly independent of the prior thermal history. Linear growth rates of crystallization of PEEK have been measuredin the temperature range of 260–325°C for melt-pressed films and solvent cast films. Detailed kinetic analysis indicated that PEEK exhibited an unmistakable regime II → III transition at 296 ± 1°C. The II → III transition was clearly present irrespective of the rather drastic changes in U*. It is interesting that the branching and crosslinking retarded the growth rate of PEEK, but a transition from regime II to regime III still existed. For melt-pressed films after equilibration at 400°C for 15 min, values of σ and q suggest that U* should be taken nearer to 1500 cal/mol in the case of T = Tg − 30 K and 2000 cal/mol in the case of T = Tg − 51.6 K. The Kg(III)/Kg(II) ratio (1.32) was not as close to the predicted value of 2 as was Hoffman's ratio. For PEEK, the Thomas-Staveley constant (β) should be closer to 0.25 or 0.3 instead of 0.1. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 36: 1335–1348, 1998  相似文献   

8.
The melting and crystallization behavior of poly(L -lactic acid) (PLLA; weight-average molecular weight = 3 × 105) was studied with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). DSC curves for PLLA samples were obtained at various cooling rates (CRs) from the melt (210 °C). The peak crystallization temperature and the exothermic heat of crystallization determined from the DSC curve decreased almost linearly with increasing log(CR). DSC melting curves for the melt-crystallized samples were obtained at various heating rates (HRs). The double-melting behavior was confirmed by the double endothermic peaks, a high-temperature peak (H) and a low-temperature peak (L), that appeared in the DSC curves at slow HRs for the samples prepared with a slow CR. Peak L increased with increasing HR, whereas peak H decreased. The peak melting temperatures of L and H [Tm(L) and Tm(H)] decreased linearly with log(HR). The appearance region of the double-melting peaks (L and H) was illustrated in a CR–HR map. Peak L decreased with increasing CR, whereas peak H increased. Tm(L) and Tm(H) decreased almost linearly with log(CR). The characteristics of the crystallization and double-melting behavior were explained by the slow rates of crystallization and recrystallization, respectively. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 42: 25–32, 2004  相似文献   

9.
The melting behavior and crystallization kinetics of poly(thiodiethylene adipate) (PSDEA) were investigated with differential scanning calorimetry and hot‐stage optical microscopy. The observed multiple endotherms, commonly displayed by polyesters, were influenced by the crystallization temperature (Tc) and ascribed to melting and recrystallization processes. Linear and nonlinear treatments were applied to estimate the equilibrium melting temperature for PSDEA with the corrected values of the melting temperature. The nonlinear estimation yielded a higher value by about 9 °C. Isothermal crystallization kinetics were analyzed according to Avrami's treatment. Values of Avrami's exponent close to 3 were obtained, independently of Tc, in agreement with a crystallization process originating from predetermined nuclei and characterized by three‐dimensional spherulitic growth. As a matter of fact, space‐filling spherulites were observed by optical microscopy at all Tc's. The rate of crystallization became lower as Tc increased, as usual at a low undercooling, the crystallization process being controlled by nucleation. Moreover, the crystal structure of PSDEA was determined from powder X‐ray diffraction data by full profile fitting. A triclinic unit cell containing two polymer chains arranged parallel to the c axis was found. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 42: 553–566, 2004  相似文献   

10.
The melting behavior and the crystallization kinetics of random poly(propylene/neopenthyl terephthalate) copolymers (PPT‐PNT) were investigated by means of differential scanning calorimetry and hot‐stage optical microscopy. Multiple endotherms were evidenced in the PPT‐PNT samples, due to melting and recrystallization processes, similarly to PPT. By applying the Hoffman‐Weeks' method, the Tm° of the copolymers was derived. Baur's equation described well the Tm‐composition data. The isothermal crystallization kinetics was analyzed according to the Avrami's treatment. The introduction of NT units decreased the crystallization rate in comparison to pure PPT. Values of the Avrami's exponent close to three were obtained in all cases, regardless of Tc, in agreement with a crystallization process originating from predeterminated nuclei and characterized by three dimensional spherulitic growth. As a matter of fact, space‐filling spherulites were observed by optical microscopy at all Tcs. Banded spherulites were found for PPT‐PNT5 and PPT‐PNT10, the band spacing being affected by both Tc and composition. © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 46: 818–830, 2008  相似文献   

11.
The article deals with the melting and nonisothermal crystallization behavior of neat poly (phenylene sulphide) (PPS) and its composites with a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer (TLCP)—Vectra A950, prepared by melt mixing and probed by differential scanning calorimetry. The various macrokinetic models namely, the Ozawa, the modified Avrami, the Tobin, and the Mo models were applied to describe the crystallization kinetics under nonisothermal conditions. The kinetic crystallizabilty of PPS/TLCP composites calculated using the approach of Ziabicki varies depending on these two composite composition‐induced effects. Similarly Mo model predicts that to obtain a higher degree of crystallizabilty for PPS/TLCP composites, a higher cooling rate should be used. The effective energy barrier based on the differential isoconversional method of Friedman is found to be an increasing function of relative degree of melt conversion. The effect is explained in terms of nucleation theory proposed by Wunderlich to crystallization of polymers. The Lauritzen–Hoffman parameters are estimated using G = 1/t0.5 effective activation energy equation proposed by Vyazovkin and Sbirrazzuoli. The Kg values estimated from latter equations are more comparable with values obtained using isothermal crystallization data than 1/t0.5 method. Furthermore, the kinetic analysis using this equation shows a regime transition from regime II to regime III for 100/00, 90/10, 80/20 PPS/TLCP composites, basically attributed to reduced mobility of PPS chains in composites. This regime II to III transition is accompanied by a morphological transition from defective spherulitic sheaf‐like structures to ordered sheaf‐like structures. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 48: 1070–1100, 2010  相似文献   

12.
The nonisothermal cold crystallization behavior of intercalated polylactide (PLA)/clay nanocomposites (PLACNs) was studied using differential scanning calorimetry, polarized optical microscope, X‐ray diffractometer, dynamic mechanical thermal analysis, and Fourier transform infrared spectrometer. The results show that both the cold crystallization temperature (Tcc) and melting point (Tm) of PLA matrix decreases monotonously with increasing of clay loadings, accompanied by the decreasing degree of crystallinity (Xc%) at the low heating rates (≤5 °C/min). However, the Xc% of PLACNs presents a remarkable increase at the high heating rate of 10 °C/min in contrast to that of neat PLA. The crystallization kinetics was then analyzed by the Avrami, Jezioney, Ozawa, Mo, Kissinger and Lauritzen–Hoffman kinetic models. It can be concluded that at the low heating rate, the cold crystallization of both the neat PLA and nanocomposites proceeds by regime III kinetics. The nucleation effect of clay promote the crystallization to some extent, while the impeding effect of clay results in the decrease of crystallization rate with increasing of clay loadings. At the high heating rate of 10 °C/min, crystallization proceeds mainly by regime II kinetics. Thus, the formation of much more incomplete crystals in the PLACNs with high clay loadings due to the dominant multiple nucleations mechanism in regime II, may have primary contribution to the lower crystallization kinetics, also as a result to the higher degree of crystallinity and lower melting point in contrast to that of neat PLA. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 45: 1100–1113, 2007  相似文献   

13.
The poly(p‐phenylene sulfide) (PPS) nonisothermal cold‐crystallization behavior was investigated in a wide heating rate range. The techniques employed were the usual Differential Scanning Calorimetry (DSC), and the less conventional FT‐IR spectroscopy and Energy Dispersive X‐ray Diffraction (EDXD). The low heating rates (Φ) explored by EDXD (0.1 K min?1) and FT‐IR (0.5–10 K min?1) are contiguous and complementary to the DSC ones (5–30 K min?1). The crystallization temperature changes from 95 °C at Φ = 0.05 K min?1 to 130 °C at Φ = 30 K min?1. In such a wide temperature range the Kissinger model failed. The model is based on an Arrhenius temperature dependence of the crystallization rate and is widely employed to evaluate the activation energy of the crystallization process. The experimental results were satisfactorily fit by replacing in the Kissinger model the Arrhenius equation with the Vogel–Fulcher–Tamann function and fixing U* = 6.28 k J mol?1, the activation energy needed for the chains movements, according to Hoffmann. The temperature at which the polymer chains are motionless (T = 42 °C) was found by fitting the experimental data. It appears to be reasonable in the light of our previously reported isothermal crystallization results, which indicated T = 48 °C. Moreover, at the lower heating rate, mostly explored by FT‐IR, a secondary stepwise crystallization process was well evidenced. In first approximation, it contributes to about 17% of the crystallinity reached by the sample. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 2725–2736, 2005  相似文献   

14.
The influence of the cure process and the resulting reaction‐induced phase separation (RIPS) on the crystallization and melting behavior of polyoxymethylene (POM) in epoxy resin diglycidylether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) blends has been studied at different cure temperatures (180 and 145 °C). The crystallization and melting behavior of POM was studied with DSC and the simultaneous blend morphology changes were studied using OM. At first, the influence of the epoxy monomer on the dynamically crystallized POM was investigated. Secondly, a cure temperature above the melting point of POM (Tcure = 180 °C) was applied for blends with curing agent to study the influence of resulting phase morphology types on the crystallization behavior of POM in the epoxy blends. Large differences between particle/matrix and phase‐inverted structures have been observed. Thirdly, the cure temperature was lowered below the melting temperature of POM, inducing isothermal crystallization prior to RIPS. As a consequence, a distinction was made between dynamically and isothermally crystallized POM. Concerning the dynamically crystallized material, a clear difference could be made between the material crystallized in the homogeneous sample and that crystallized in the phase‐separated structures. The isothermally crystallized POM was to a large extent influenced by the conversion degree of the epoxy resin. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 45: 2456–2469, 2007  相似文献   

15.
16.
The crystallization behavior of biodegradable poly(butylene succinate) and copolyesters poly(butylene succinate‐co‐propylene succinate)s (PBSPS) was investigated by using 1H NMR, DSC and POM, respectively. Isothermal crystallization kinetics of the polyesters has been analyzed by the Avrami equation. The 2.2‐2.8 range of Avrami exponential n indicated that the crystallization mechanism was a heterogeneous nucleation with spherical growth geometry in the crystallization process of polyesters. Multiple melting peaks were observed during heating process after isothermal crystallization, and it could be explained by the melting and recrystallization model. PBSPS was identified to have the same crystal structure with that of PBS by using wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD), suggesting that only BS unit crystallized while the PS unit was in an amorphous state. The crystal structure of polyesters was not affected by the crystallization temperatures, too. Besides the normal extinction crosses under the POM, the double‐banded extinction patterns with periodic distance along the radial direction were also observed in the spherulites of PBS and PBSPS. The morphology of spherulites strongly depended on the crystallization temperature. © 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 45: 420–428, 2007  相似文献   

17.
Isothermal ultra‐cooling crystallization tests were conducted on three blown film grade bimodal HDPE resins using an ultrafast scanning calorimeter, the Flash DSC. Isothermal tests were performed to study the regime transition, the thermal nucleation and the spherulitical growth using the Hoffman‐Lauritzen theory in a range between 90 °C and 116 °C. Temperature profile estimations using such data were in good agreement with actual blown film process data. © 2016 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 2016 , 54, 2425–2431  相似文献   

18.
Poly(butylene succinate) (PBSu) and two poly(butylene succinate‐co‐propylene succinate)s were synthesized via the direct polycondensation reaction. The copolyesters were characterized as having 7.0.and 11.5 mol % propylene succinate (PS) units, respectively, by 1H NMR. A differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and a polarized light microscope (PLM) adopted to study the nonisothermal crystallization of these polyesters at a cooling rate of 1, 2, 3, 5, 6, and 10 °C/min. Morphology and the isothermal growth rates of spherulites under PLM experiments were monitored and obtained by curve‐fitting. These continuous rate data were analyzed with the Lauritzen?Hoffman equation. A transition of regime II → III was found at 95.6, 84.4, and 77.3 °C for PBSu, PBPSu 95/5, and PBPSu 90/10, respectively. DSC exothermic curves show that all of the nonisothermal crystallization occurred in regime III. DSC data were analyzed using modified Avrami, Ozawa, Mo, Friedman, and Vyazovkin equations. All the results of PLM and DSC measurements indicate that incorporation of minor PS units into PBSu markedly inhibits the crystallization of the resulting polymer. © 2010 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 48: 1299–1308, 2010  相似文献   

19.
The influence of thermal history on morphology, melting, and crystallization behavior of bacterial poly(3‐hydroxybutyrate) (PHB) has been investigated using temperature‐modulated DSC (TMDSC), wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXRD) and polarized optical microscopy (POM). Various thermal histories were imparted by crystallization with continuous and different modulated cooling programs that involved isoscan and cool–heat segments. The subsequent melting behavior revealed that PHB experienced secondary crystallization during heating and the extent of secondary crystallization varied with the cooling treatment. PHB crystallized under slow, continuous, and moderate cooling rates were found to exhibit double melting behavior due to melting of TMDSC scan‐induced secondary crystals. PHB underwent considerable secondary crystallization/annealing that took place under modulated cooling conditions. The overall melting behavior was interpreted in terms of recrystallization and/or annealing of crystals. Interestingly, the PHB analyzed by temperature modulation programs showed a broad exotherm before the melting peak in the nonreversing heat capacity curve and a multiple melting reversing curve, verifying that the melting–recrystallization and remelting process was operative. WAXRD and POM studies supported the correlations from DSC and TMDSC results. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 44: 70–78, 2006  相似文献   

20.
The crystallization behavior after partial or complete melting of the α phase of iPP is examined by combined differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and optical microscopy: calorimetric results are directly correlated with corresponding morphologies of microtome sections of DSC samples. On partial melting at various temperatures (hereafter referred to as Ts) located in a narrow range (4°C) below and near Tm, the number of nuclei increases (as in classical self-nucleation experiments), by several orders of magnitude; on subsequent cooling, the crystallization peak is shifted by up to 25°C. After partial melting in the lower part of the Ts range and recrystallization, the polymers display a prominent morphology “memory effect” whereby a phantom pattern of the initial spherulite morphology is maintained. After partial melting in the upper part of the Ts range the initial morphology is erased and self-nucleation affects only the total number of nuclei. The present experimental procedures make it possible to define, under “standard” conditions, the crystallization range of the polymer and in particular, the maximum crystallization temperature achievable when “ideally” nucleated. © John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

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