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1.
The effect of benzoic acid (BA) on the crystallization behavior of poly(3-hydroxybut yrate; PHB) was studied. A differential scanning calorimeter was used to monitor the crystallization kinetics and thermal behavior. During the crystallization process from the melt, the presence of BA led to a decrease of the crystallization temperature of PHB compared with that for pure PHB. From the depression of the melting and glass transition temperatures of PHB, it can be concluded that BA is miscible, and has a strong plasticization effect on PHB. Isothermal crystallization at 80°C results showed that the addition of BA caused a decrease in the overall crystallization rate of PHB. Polarized optical micrographs of PHB/BA showed that the nucleation density of PHB spherulites decreased with increasing weight percentage of BA.  相似文献   

2.
Poly(butylene succinate-co-adipate) (PBSA)/poly (trimethylene carbonate) (PTMC) blend samples with different weight ratios were prepared by solution blending. The morphologies after isothermal crystallization and in the melt were observed by optical microscopy (OM). Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) was used to characterize the isothermal crystallization kinetics and melting behaviors. According to the OM image before and after melting, it was found that the blends formed heterogenous morphologies. When the PTMC content was low (20%), PBSA formed the continuous phase, while when the PTMC contents was high (40%), PBSA formed the dispersed phase. The glass transition temperatures (Tg) of the blends were determined by DSC and the differences of the Tg values were smaller than the difference between those of pure PBSA and PTMC. In addition, the equilibrium melting points were depressed in the blends. According to these results, the PBSA/PTMC blends were determined as being partially miscible blends. The crystallization kinetics was investigated according to the Avrami equation. It was found that the incorporation of PTMC did not change the crystallization mechanism of PBSA. However, the crystallization rate decreased with the increase of PTMC contents. The change of crystallization kinetics is related with the existences of amorphous PTMC, the partial miscibility between PLLA and PTMC, and the changes of phase structures.  相似文献   

3.
Poly(trimethylene terephthalate)(PTT)/thermoplastic polyester elastomer (TPEE) blends were prepared and their miscibility, crystallization and melting behaviors, phase morphology, dynamic mechanical behavior, rheology behavior, spherulites morphology, and mechanical properties were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA), parallel-plate rotational rheometry, polarized optical microscopy (POM), wide angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD), universal tensile tester and impact tester, respectively. The results suggested that PTT and TPEE were partially miscible in the amorphous state, the TPEE rich phase was dispersed uniformly in the solid matrix with a size smaller than 2 μm, and the glass transition temperatures of the blends decreased with increasing TPEE content. The TPEE component had a good effect on toughening the PTT without depressing the tensile strength. The blends had improved melt viscosities for processing. When the blends crystallized from the melt state, the onset crystallization temperature decreased, but they had a faster crystallization rate at low temperatures. All the blends’ melts exhibited a predominantly viscous behavior rather than an elastic behavior, but the melt elasticity increased with increasing TPEE content. When the blends crystallized from the melt, the PTT component could form spherulites but their morphology was imperfect with a small size. The blends had larger storage moduli at low temperatures than that of pure PTT.  相似文献   

4.
Isotactic polypropylene/poly(cis-butadiene) rubber (iPP/PcBR) blends were prepared by melt mixing. Isothermal crystallization and miscibility for neat iPP and blends of iPP/PcBR were investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. The presence of PcBR remarkably affected isothermal crystalline behaviors of iPP. An addition of PcBR caused shorter crystallization time and a faster overall crystallization rate, meaning a heterogeneous nucleation effect of PcBR upon crystallization of iPP. For the same sample, the crystallization peak was broader and the supercooling decreased as the crystallization temperature increased. The Avrami equation was suitable to describe the primary isothermal crystallization process of iPP and blends. The addition of PcBR led to an increase of values of the Avrami exponent n, which we suggest was because the blends had a stronger trend of instantaneous three-dimensional growth than neat iPP. The equilibrium melting point depression of the blends was observed, indicating that the blends were partly miscible in the melt.  相似文献   

5.
Fully biodegradable poly(L-lactide) and poly(ethylene succinate) (PLLA/PES) blends were prepared via melt-blending using PLLA and PES as reactants in a stainless steel chamber. The prepared PLLA/PES blend, as well as neat PLLA and PES, was characterized by Fourier transform infrared spectra (FTIR) and X-ray diffraction (XRD) to confirm the structure and the crystallization of PLLA in the blend. The mechanical properties of PLLA/PES blends were determined by bending and tensile tests and the effects of PES content on the mechanical properties of PLLA/PES blends were investigated. It was found that blending some amount of PES could significantly improve the elongation at break while still keeping considerably high strength and modulus. With increasing PES content, both strength and modulus gradually decreased; however the elongation at break significantly increased. SEM was used to examine the morphology of fracture surfaces of PLLA/PES blends.  相似文献   

6.
Structural, Theological, thermal, and mechanical properties of blends of poly(ethylene naphthalate) (PEN) and poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) obtained by melt blending were investigated using capillary rheometry, differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), scanning electron microscopic (SEM) observation, tensile testing. X-ray diffraction, and 1H nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) measurements. The melt Theological behavior of the PEN/PET blends was very similar to that of the two parent polymers. The melt viscosity of the blends was between that of PEN and that of PET. Thermal properties and NMR measurement of the blends revealed that PEN is partially miscible with PET in the as molded blends, indicating that an interchange reaction occurs to some extent on melt processing. The blend of 50/50 PEN/PET was more difficult to crystallize compared with blends of other PEN/PET ratios. The blends, once melted during DSC measurements, almost never showed cold crystallization and subsequent melting and definitely exhibited a single glass transition temperature between those of PEN and PET during a reheating run. Improvement of the miscibility between PEN and PET with melting is mostly due to an increase in transesterification. The tensile modulus of the PEN/PET blend strands had a low value, reflecting amorphous structures of the blends, while tensile strength at the yield point increased linearly with increasing PEN content.  相似文献   

7.
The mechanical properties, morphology, crystallization, and melting behaviors and nonisothermal crystallization kinetics of poly (trimethylene terephthalate)(PTT)/maleinized acrylonitrile-butadiene-styrene (ABS-g-MAH) blends were investigated by an impact tester, polarized optical microscopy, and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The results suggested that the ABS-g-MAH component served as both a nucleating agent for increasing the crystallization rate and as a toughening agent for improving the impact strength of PTT. When the ABS-g-MAH content was 5wt.%, the blend had the best toughness and a high crystallization rate. The blends showed different crystallization rates and subsequent melting behaviors due to their different ABS-g-MAH contents. The Ozawa theory and the method developed by Mo and coworkers were used to study the nonisothermal crystallization kinetics of the blends. The kinetic crystallization rate parameters suggested that the proper contents of ABS-g-MAH can highly accelerate the crystallization rate of PTT, but this effect nearly reaches saturation for ABS-g-MAH contents over 5%. The Ozawa exponents calculated from the DSC data suggested that the PTT crystals in the blends have similar growth dimensions as those in neat PTT, although they are smaller and/or imperfect. The effective activation energy calculated by the method developed by Kissinger also indicates that the blends with higher ABS-g-MAH content were easier to crystallize.  相似文献   

8.
Recycled poly(ethylene terephthalate) (r-PET) was blended with poly(ethylene octene) (POE) and glycidyl methacrylate grafted poly(ethylene octene) (mPOE). The nonisothermal crystallization behavior of r-PET, r-PET/POE, and r-PET/mPOE blends was investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The crystallization peak temperatures (T p ) of the r-PET/POE and r-PET/mPOE blends were higher than that of r-PET at various cooling rates. Furthermore, the half-time for crystallization (t 1/2 ) decreased in the r-PET/POE and r-PET/mPOE blends, implying the nucleating role of POE and mPOE. The mPOE had lower nucleation activity than POE because the in situ formed copolymer PET-g-POE in the PET/mPOE blend restricted the movement of PET chains. Non-isothermal crystallization kinetics analysis was carried out based on the modified Avrami equation, the Ozawa equation, and the Mo method. It was found that the Mo method provided a better fit for the experimental data for all samples. The effective energy barriers for nonisothermal crystallization of r-PET and its blends were determined by the Kissinger method.  相似文献   

9.
The crystallization behavior of poly(trimethylene terephthalate (PTT) in compatibilized and uncompatibilized PTT/polycarbonate (PC) blends are investigated in the research reported in this paper. The differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) results showed that the crystallization behaviors of PTT/PC blends were very sensitive to PC content. The onset (Tci) and the peak (Tc) crystallization temperatures shifted to lower temperatures whereas the area of the exotherm decreased quickly as the PC content was increased. The Avrami exponent, n, decreased from 4.32 to 3.61 as the PC content was increased from 0 to 20 wt %, and the growth rate constant, Z c , decreased gradually as well. This suggests that the nucleation mechanism exhibits the tendency of changing gradually from a thermal nucleation to an athermal mode although the growth mechanism still remains three‐dimensional. When epoxy (2.7 phr) was added as a compatibilizer during melt blending, the Tci and Tc shifted slightly to higher temperature (≤2°C), and the crystallization enthalpy, however, exhibited an increased crystallinity with the exception of the 90/10/2.7 phr PTT/PC/Epoxy. This suggests that the epoxy make a positive contribution to the PTT crystallization. Moreover, the influences of epoxy on the crystallization behaviors of PTT/PC blends are related to the epoxy content. By contrast, the compatibilizer of ethylene‐propylene‐diene copolymer graft glycidyl methacrylate (EPDM‐g‐GMA, ≤6.3 phr) had little effect on the crystallization behavior of PTT/PC blends. For PTT/PC/Epoxy (2.7 phr) blends, the Avrami exponent, n, decreased to near 3, while the growth rate constant, Z c , increased slightly as PC content was increased from 0 to 20 wt %. It is suggested that epoxy accelerated the process of the nucleation mechanism changing from thermal nucleation to an athermal mode. The EPDM‐g‐GMA had little effect on the nucleation mode and spherical growth mechanism. The PTT spherulite morphologies in PTT/PC blends were very sensitive to blend composition. Completely different morphologies were observed in pure PTT, PTT/PC, PTT/PC/Epoxy, and PTT/PC/EPDM‐g‐GMA blends.  相似文献   

10.
Abstract

Poly(trimethylene terephthalate)/polycarbonate (PTT/PC) blends were prepared by melt blending and rapid quenching in ice water. The miscibility and thermal properties were investigated using differential scanning calorimeter (DSC) and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). The blend's morphologies were investigated using scanning and transmission electron microscopies. Both DSC and DMA results suggested that PTT and PC were very limited, partially miscible pairs. The melting point, melt crystallization, and cold crystallization exotherms in the blends of PTT were depressed by the presence and amount of PC. When the PC content was <50 wt%, PC spherical particles were found to distribute evenly in the PTT matrix; at 50–60 wt%, the two‐phase structures were close to being bicontinuous. At higher PC content, PTT formed a string‐like texture in the PC matrix. The PTT spherulitic morphologies in PTT/PC blends were found to be very sensitive to PC and PC content. When the PC content was ≥60 wt%, the blends crystallized as an agglomeration of tiny PTT crystals.  相似文献   

11.
Thermal properties of polypropylene with poly(cis-butadiene) rubber (iPP/PcBR) blends have been measured by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and the melting point Tm, crystallization temperature Tc, enthalpy Δ H (melting enthalpies and crystalline enthalpies), and equilibrium melting point T0 m have been measured and calculated. The variation of Tm, Tc, Δ H and T0 m with composition in the blends was discussed, showing that an interaction between phases is present in iPP/PcBR blends. The degree of supercooling characterizing the interaction between two phases in the blends and the crystallizability of the blends which bears a relationship to the composition of the blends was discussed. The kinetics of isothermal crystallization of the crystalline phase in iPP/PcBR blends was studied in terms of the Avrami equation, and the Avrami exponent n and velocity constant K were obtained. The Avrami exponent n is between 3 and 2, meaning that iPP has a thermal nucleation with two dimensional growths. The variation of the Avrami exponent n, velocity constant K, and crystallization rate G bear a relation to the composition of the blends, n increases with increasing content ofPcBR. K also increased with increasing content of PcBR. All of the K for the blends are greater than for pure iPP. The crystallization rate G (t1/2) depends on the compositions in the blends; all G of the blends are greater than for iPP.  相似文献   

12.
The crystallization behavior of uncompatibilized and reactive compatibilized poly(trimethylene terephthalate)/polypropylene (PTT/PP) blends was investigated. In both blends, PTT and PP crystallization rates were accelerated by the presence of each other, especially at low concentrations. When PP content in the uncompatibilized blends was increased to 50–60 wt%, PTT showed fractionated crystallization; a small PTT crystallization exotherm appeared at ~135°C besides the normal ~175°C exotherm. Above 70 wt% PP, PTT crystallization exotherms disappeared. In contrast, PP in the blends showed crystallization exotherms at 113–121°C for all compositions. When a maleic anhydride‐grafted PP (PP‐g‐MAH) was added as a reactive compatibilizer, the crystallization temperatures (T c ) of PTT and PP shifted significantly to lower temperatures. The shift of PTT's T c was larger than that of the PP, suggesting that addition of the PP‐g‐MAH had a larger effect on PTT's crystallization than on PP due to reaction between maleic anhydride and PTT.

The nonisothermal crystallization kinetics was analyzed by a modified Avrami equation. The results confirmed that PTT's and PP's crystallization was accelerated by the presence of each other and the effect varied with blend compositions. When the PP content increased from 0 to 60 wt%, PTT's Avrami exponent n decreased from 4.35 to 3.01; nucleation changed from a thermal to an athermal mode with three‐dimensional growths. In contrast, when the PTT content increased from 0 to 90 wt% in the blends, changes in PP's n values indicated that nucleation changed from a thermal (0–50 wt% PTT) to athermal (60–70 wt% PTT) mode, and then back to a thermal (80–90 wt% PTT) mode. When PP‐g‐MAH was added as a compatibilizer, the crystallization process shifted considerably to lower temperatures and it took a longer crystallization time to reach a given crystallinity compared to the uncompatibilized blends.  相似文献   

13.
The melting behaviors of poly(trimethylene terephthalate)/polycarbonate (PTT/PC) blends, compatibilized by epoxy, and PTT spherulite morphology in the blends were investigated. When epoxy was present during blending, the melting behaviors of PTT/PC blends changed substantially; glass transition temperatures (Tg's) and cold crystallization temperature (Tcc's) of the PTT‐rich phase shifted to higher temperatures, while Tm's shifted slightly to lower temperatures, indicating that epoxy suppressed considerably all processes of dynamic movements pertinent to molecular (or segmental) movements. The cold crystallization process responded sensitively to thermal history. Changes of Tcc's with composition suggested that the epoxy's compatibilization effect was pronounced when PTT and PC were in near equal content.

Recrystallization or reorganization exotherms appeared before melting for isothermally crystallized PTT/PC and PTT/PC epoxy (E) blends. A wide angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD) analysis showed that, although the perfection of PTT crystallites was influenced either by PC content and the presence of compatibilizer or by the crystallization temperature and crystallization time, PTT's crystal structure was independent of these variables.

The polarized light microscopy (PLM) observations showed that PTT spherulite morphology was very sensitive to blend composition. Epoxy addition interfered severely with the growth of PTT spherulites, causing them to be much less developed. When the spherulites grew under a condition of varied composition, they would exhibit diversified spherulite morphology, though in one spherulite.  相似文献   

14.
Two kinds of blends of thermotropic liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) and poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) were prepared by solution and melt blending, respectively. Crystallization behavior of the blends was observed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The LCP in both blends considerably decreased the cold crystallization temperature of PET and increased the crystallization rate in the low-temperature region, but did not show any significant effect on crystallization in the high-temperature region. Phase behavior of samples prepared by melt blending was investigated with the scanning electronic microscope (SEM). It was found that LCP/PET blends display a biphasic structure with an aromatic unit-rich phase as a dispersed domain, and a highly oriented fibrous structure was formed on the fracture surface of the blends. During the melt blending process, PET reacted with LCP through transesterification, as indicated by both DSC and SEM measurements.  相似文献   

15.

Studies on the miscibility and intermolecular specific interactions in the blends of two structurally similar poly(hydroxyether ester)s, poly(hydroxyether terephthalate ester) (PHETE), and poly(hydroxyether benzoate) (PHEB) with poly(4‐vinyl pyrrolidone) (PVPy) are reported. In the miscible blends there are intermolecular specific interactions between PHEEs and PVPy. It was found that intercomponent hydrogen‐bonding interactions in PHETE/PVPy blends are much stronger than those in PHEB/PVPy blends. It seems that the higher ratio of hydroxyl to carbonyl groups results in the stronger intermolecular hydrogen bonding interactions. The difference in intermolecular specific interactions between the two miscible systems is interpreted on the basis of the impact of macromolecular structures on intermolecular specific interactions. The structural characteristics of macromolecular chains, such as chain connectivity, accessibility (or screening effect), and rigidity of the macromolecular chains have a profound effect on the intermolecular interactions. These factors constitute steric hindrance and reduce the specific interactions among functional groups. These factors can become dominant in the blends of polymers.  相似文献   

16.
The nonisothermal crystallization process of polycaprolactone (PCL)/crosslinked carboxylated polyester resin (CPER) blends has been investigated for different blend concentrations by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The DSC measurements were carried out under different cooling rates namely: 1, 3, 5, 10, and 20°C/min. Thermally induced crosslinking of CPER in the blends was accomplished using triglycidyl isocyanurate as a crosslinking agent at 200°C for 10 min. The cured PCL/CPER blends were transparent above the melting temperature of PCL and only one glass transition temperature, Tg, located in the temperature range between the two Tgs of the pure polymer components, was observed, indicating that PCL and crosslinked CPER are miscible over the entire range of concentration. The nonisothermal crystallization kinetics was analyzed based on different theoretical approaches, including modified Avrami, Ozawa, and combined Avrami–Ozawa methods. All of the different theoretical approaches successfully described the kinetic behavior of the nonisothermal crystallization process of PCL in the blends. In addition, the spherulitic growth rate was evaluated nonisothermally from the spherulitic morphologies at different temperatures using polarized optical microscope during cooling the molten sample. Only one master curve of temperature dependence of crystal growth rate could be constructed for PCL/CPER blends, regardless of different blend concentrations. Furthermore, the activation energy of nonisothermal crystallization process (ΔEa) was calculated as a function of blend concentration based on the Kissinger equation. The value of ΔEa was found to be concentration dependent, i.e., increasing from 83 kJ/mol for pure PCL to 115 and 119 kJ/mol for 75 and 50 wt% PCL, respectively. This finding suggested that CPER could significantly restrict the dynamics of the PCL chain segments, thereby inhibit the crystallization process and consequently elevate the ΔEa.  相似文献   

17.
The kinetics of isothermal melt crystallization of poly(trimethylene terephthalate) (PTT)/poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) blends were investigated using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) over the crystallization temperature range of 184–192°C. Analysis of the data was carried out based on the Avrami equation. The values of the exponent found for all samples were between 2.0 and 3.0. The results indicated that the crystallization process tends to be two‐dimensional growth, which was consistent with the result of polarizing light microscopy (PLM). The activation energies were also determined by the Arrhenius equation for isothermal crystallization. The values of ΔE of PTT/PBT blends were greater than those for PTT and PBT. Lastly, using values of transport parameters common to many polymers (U*=6280 J/mol, T =T g – 30), together with experimentally determined values of T m 0 and T g, the nucleation parameter, K g, for PTT, PBT, and PTT/PBT blends was estimated based on the Lauritzen–Hoffman theory.  相似文献   

18.
Oriented fibers or films of binary polymer blends from polycondensates were investigated by two-dimensional (2D) wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) during the finishing process of microfibrillar reinforced composite (MFC) preparation, that is, heating to a temperature between the melting temperatures of the two components, isothermal annealing, and subsequent cooling. It is shown that the crystallization behavior in such MFC from polycondensates depends not only on the blend composition, but also on thermal treatment conditions. Poly(ethylene terephthalate)/polyamide 12 (PET/PA12), poly(butylene terephthalate)/poly(ether ester) (PBT/PEE), and PET/PA6 (polyamide 6) composites were prepared in various compositions from the components. Materials were investigated using rotating anode and synchrotron X-ray source facilities. The effect of the annealing time on the expected isotropization of the lower melting component was studied in the PET/PA6 blend. It was found that PA6 isotropization took place after 2 h; shorter (up to 30 min) and longer (up to 8 h) melt annealing results in oriented crystallization due to different reasons. In PET/PA12 composites, the effect of PA12 transcrystallization with reorientation was confirmed for various blend compositions. The relative strength of the effect decreases with progressing bulk crystallization. Earlier presumed coexistence of isotropic and highly oriented crystallites of the same kind with drawn PBT/PEE blend was confirmed by WAXS from a synchrotron source.

  相似文献   

19.
The effect of blend composition on crystallization morphology and behavior of a crystalline/crystalline blend, poly(l-lactic acid) (PLLA)/poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), during slow, non-isothermal crystallization was studied by polarized light microscopy (PLM) connected with a hot-stage and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). The results showed that all of the PLLA/PEO blends produced spherulites which gradually became bigger and looser, as well as coarser, with the increment of the PEO content, indicating that the PEO crystals was resided in the interlamellar or interfibrillar (between clusters of commonly oriented lamellae) regions of the PLLA spherulites. In the (25/75) and (10/90) blends, the nucleation and growth processes of the PEO spherulites could be clearly observed in the pre-existing PLLA spherulites. The onset crystallization temperature and the melting point of one component decreased with increasing the content of the other one owing to the good miscibility of the two components in the non-crystalline state and the interaction between their macromolecules, indicating that the crystallization of each component was influenced by the other one.  相似文献   

20.
Poly(phenylenesulfide) (PPS) is a high-performance engineering thermoplastic with exceptional thermal and chemical resistance. The results of crystallization behavior of blends of PPS with amorphous polyamide (PA) are presented. The melting and crystallization behavior was studied using differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and the crystalline morphology was studied using optical microscopy. The results of thermal analysis indicate that the blends exhibit composition-dependent melting point depression. Optical microscopy studies showed the uniform distribution of amorphous nylon in PPS spherulites. The presence of amorphous nylon enhanced the growth rate compared to that for the neat polymer. The observed changes in the equilibrium melting point crystallization behavior, and spherulitic growth rate are explained.  相似文献   

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