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1.
Summary: Temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) and crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF) fractionate semicrystalline polymers according to their crystallizabilities from dilute solution and have been widely used to measure the CCD of LLDPE. A new fractionation technique, known as crystallization elution fractionation (CEF), has been developed recently. The main difference between CEF and TREF and CRYSTAF is that the crystallization cycle in CEF is performed dynamically under solvent flow in a long column that contains an inert support material. In this paper, several metallocene-LLDPE resins have been analyzed by CEF to investigate the effect of cooling cycle parameters, comonomer fraction, polymer molecular weight, and blend cocrystallization on the fractionation. This new technique can be used to obtain CCDs with better resolution and in shorter times than TREF and CRYSTAF.  相似文献   

2.
For a long time ethylene‐propylene rubber (EPR) copolymers with high comonomer contents were believed to be amorphous materials with a random copolymer composition. This is not completely correct as has been shown by temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) combined with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF), and high temperature–high‐performance liquid chromatography (HT‐HPLC). When using only conventional crystallization‐based fractionation methods, the comprehensive compositional analysis of EPR copolymers was impossible due to the fact that large fractions of these copolymers do not crystallize under CRYSTAF conditions. In the present work, HT‐HPLC was used for the separation of the EPR copolymers according to their ethylene and propylene distributions along the polymer chains. These investigations showed the existence of long ethylene sequences in the bulk samples which was further confirmed by DSC. The results on the bulk samples prompted us to conduct preparative fractionations of EPR copolymers having varying ethylene contents using TREF. Surprisingly, significant amounts of crystallizing materials were obtained that were analyzed using a multistep protocol. CRYSTAF and DSC analyses of the TREF fractions revealed the presence of components with large crystallizable sequences that had not been detected by the bulk samples analyses. HT‐HPLC provided a comprehensive separation and characterization of both the amorphous and the crystalline TREF fractions. The TREF fractions eluting at higher temperatures showed the presence of ethylene‐rich copolymers and PE homopolymer. In order to obtain additional structural information on the separated fractions, HT‐HPLC was coupled to Fourier transform‐infrared (FT‐IR) spectroscopy. The FT‐IR data confirmed that the TREF fractions were separated according to the ethylene contents of the eluted samples. Preparative TREF analysis together with a combination of various analytical methods proved to be useful tools in understanding the complex molecular composition of these rubber samples. © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part A: Polym. Chem. 2015 , 53, 863–874  相似文献   

3.
During the development of column extraction techniques, two methods of separation were identified. The first method is based on altering polymer solubility by varying the ratio of solvent in a solvent/nonsolvent mixture at a constant temperature above the polymer melting point (gradient solvent elution fractionation). This method fractionates polymers according to molecular weight. The second method is based on altering polymer solubility by varying solvent temperature (temperature rising elution fractionation—TREF). TREF fractionates semicrystalline polymers with respect to their crystallizability, independently of molecular weight effects. In the present article, supercritical propane will be used to fractionate a high‐density polyethylene sample by molecular weight and short chain branching. The main advantage of supercritical fluid fractionation is that large polymer fractions with narrow molecular weight distributions (isothermal fractionation) or narrow short chain branching distributions (isobaric fractionation) can be obtained without using hazardous organic chlorinated solvents. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 37: 553–560, 1999  相似文献   

4.
Blending of ethylene/1‐octene copolymers can be used to achieve a well‐controlled broad chemical composition distribution (CCD) required in several polyolefin applications. The CCD of copolymer blends can be estimated using crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF) or crystallization elution fractionation (CEF). Unfortunately, both techniques may be affected by the cocrystallization of chains with different compositions, leading to profiles that do not truly reflect the actual CCD of the polymer. Therefore, understanding how the polymer microstructure and the analytical conditions influence copolymer cocrystallization is critical for the proper interpretation of CRYSTAF and CEF curves. In this investigation, we studied the effect of chain crystallizabilities, blend compositions, and cooling rates on cocrystallization during CEF and CRYSTAF analysis. Cocrystallization is more prevalent when the copolymer blend has components with similar crystallizabilities, one of the components is present in much higher amount, and fast cooling rates are used. CEF was found to provide better CCD estimates than CRYSTAF in a much shorter analysis time. © 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys, 2011  相似文献   

5.
The crystallizability of narrow composition, homogeneous ethylene/1‐octene copolymers made with a constrained geometry catalyst, measured by CRYSTAF, follows a straight line correlation with the amount of total comonomer incorporated. The potential use of these resins as standards to calibrate CRYSTAF and TREF techniques is discussed. Although most of the resins analyzed have a narrow chemical composition distribution, there seems to be a relation between the broadness of the distribution and molecular weight, as predicted by Stockmayer's bivariate distribution. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 37: 89–93, 1999  相似文献   

6.
Summary: Temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) has become a popular analytical technique that is able to determine the chemical composition distribution (CCD) of an ethylene/α-olefin copolymer. An infrared (IR) detector is commonly used in TREF detection to measure the concentration of the polymer solution exiting the column as a function of elution temperature. The chemical composition of the eluting polymer at a given elution temperature can be predicted from the relationship between comonomer content and TREF elution temperature pre-established through 13C nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) analysis of TREF fractions. In this article, a Fourier transform infrared (FT-IR) spectrometer has been coupled with a TREF instrument to provide a more powerful tool for characterizing complex olefin copolymers. The Partial Least Squares (PLS) technique is used when analyzing the FT-IR spectra of the eluting polymer solutions. The power of on-line FT-IR detection in TREF is demonstrated using a few complex copolymer systems, such as ethylene-octene copolymer, polystyrene grafted ethylene-vinyl acetate copolymer and ethylene-methyl acrylate copolymer.  相似文献   

7.
In this paper, possible sources for the unexpected distributions of crystalline sequence lengths calculated from temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) calibration experiments, as reported in a previous work, are investigated. With this aim, chain folding and cocrystalization phenomena were explored in the conditions of crystallization as used for TREF or crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF). Slow crystallizations were performed from xylene solutions of model low molecular weight ethylene homopolymers with narrow molecular weight distributions. The same experiments were performed with homopolymers having narrow molecular weight distributions and with blends having wide molecular weight distributions. The resulting distributions of the lengths of crystalline methylene sequences were directly studied by Raman in the so‐called longitudinal acoustic mode (LAM) and by DSC. For ethylene homopolymers with molecular weights below 2000 g/mol, the results from Raman LAM indicate that slow crystallization in TREF or CRYSTAF systems occurs in the extended‐chain mode. For higher molecular weights, evidence of chain folding was found. In the case of blends, independent crystallization was observed for each molecular weight when the molecular weight ranges used for the blends are relatively narrow. Cocrystallization was observed when this range was increased. Overall, these results strongly support the inverse technique calculation procedure developed by our group for the calculation of distributions of lengths of crystallizable sequences from TREF spectra. In this context, the results confirm that the unexpected crystallizable sequence lengths found in our previous work really exist and can be associated to chain folding or cocrystallization phenomena. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 3083–3092, 2005  相似文献   

8.
Crystallization Analysis Fractionation is a new technique for the analysis of composition distribution in semicrystalline polymers; more specifically for the analysis of branching distribution in Polyethylene and tacticity in Polypropylene type resins. CRYSTAF as well as TREF (Temperature Rising Elution Fractionation) are separation techniques which fractionate species of differing crystallizability by slow cooling of a polymer solution. TREF however, demands in addition to the crystallization step a second temperature cycle, elution step, to obtain the polymer composition. CRYSTAF, on the other hand, extracts the information in the crystallization cycle by monitoring the solution concentration depression as temperature goes down; thus reducing significantly the analysis time and simplifying the hardware needs. CRYSTAF principles are discussed and various applications are described.  相似文献   

9.
A series of poly(ethylene‐co‐1‐hexene) samples made with rac‐ethylene bis(indenyl)zirconium dichloride/methylaluminoxane were analyzed by crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF). The nine samples had comonomer contents of 0–4.2 mol % 1‐hexene with a narrow range of molecular weights (34,000–39,000 g/mol). Because all the copolymer samples had narrow, unimodal chemical composition distributions, they were ideal as calibration standards for CRYSTAF. A linear calibration curve was constructed relating the peak crystallization temperature from CRYSTAF operated at a cooling rate of 0.1 °C/min and the comonomer content as determined by 13C NMR. Reactivity ratios for ethylene and 1‐hexene were estimated by the fitting of reactant liquid‐phase compositional data to the Mayo–Lewis equation. It was found that a value of the 1‐hexene reactivity ratio could not be unequivocally determined from the set of samples analyzed because the range of comonomer incorporation was too narrow. Stockmayer's bivariate distribution was used to model the fractionation process in CRYSTAF, and although a good fit to experimental CRYSTAF profiles was attained, the model did not fully describe the underlying crystallization phenomena. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 40: 2595–2611, 2002  相似文献   

10.
Compositionally homogeneous poly(ethylene‐α‐olefin) random copolymers with 1‐butene and 1‐hexene comonomers have been studied. The melting of solution‐crystallized specimens of these copolymers in the presence of trichlorobenzene as a diluent with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) is well correlated with analytical temperature rising elution fractionation (A‐TREF) elution temperature profiles. This indicates that the A‐TREF experiment is essentially a diluent melting experiment. Furthermore, the correction of the corresponding solid‐state melting endotherms of these copolymers with Flory's diluent melting equation yields curves that also correlate very well with the DSC diluent melting curves and the A‐TREF elution temperature profiles. Values of χ, the Flory–Huggins interaction parameter, are determined for these copolymers in trichlorobenzene. χ decreases as short‐chain branching increases. The A‐TREF elution temperature profiles of one of these copolymers are the same, within experimental error, for dilute‐solution crystallizations of the copolymer performed over an extremely broad time schedule (10 s to 3 days). This indicates the profound effect of the branches, as limiting points of the ethylene sequences, in controlling the crystal thickness distribution, which in turn controls the melting point in the presence of the diluent, or the elution temperature from the A‐TREF. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 39: 2819–2832, 2001  相似文献   

11.
Crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF) is an analytical technique for determining the distribution of chain crystallizabilities of semicrystalline polymers. After only approximately a decade since it was developed, CRYSTAF has become one of the most important characterization techniques in polyolefin characterization laboratories because it provides fast and crucial information required for the proper understanding of polymerization mechanisms and structure–property relationships. In the polyolefin industry, it has been established as an indispensable tool for product development and product quality monitoring. This highlight article covers basic operation procedures, applications, and theoretical aspects of polymer fractionation with CRYSTAF. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 1557–1570, 2005  相似文献   

12.
The effect of molecular weight and long‐chain branching on the crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF) of ethylene homopolymers was investigated. Several ethylene homopolymers were prepared with different molecular weights and levels of long‐chain branching to isolate these effects from the dominant effect of comonomer content on crystallizability measured by CRYSTAF. Molecular weight effects might be significant for samples with number‐average molecular weights below 5000, but this effect can be corrected if terminal methyl groups are taken into account. Long‐chain branching has only a very small effect on the CRYSTAF profile of the samples investigated in this study. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 39: 1616–1628, 2001  相似文献   

13.
The introduction of single-site catalysts in the polyolefins industry opens new routes to design resins with improved performance through multicatalyst-multireactor processes. Physical combination of various polyolefin types in a secondary extrusion process is also a common practice to achieve new products with improved properties. The new resins have complex structures, especially in terms of composition distribution, and their characterization is not always an easy task. Techniques like temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) or crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF) are currently used to characterize the composition distribution of these resins. It has been shown that certain combinations of polyolefins may result in equivocal results if only TREF or CRYSTAF is used separately for their characterization.  相似文献   

14.
Summary: Temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) has been regarded as a powerful technique for study of semicrystalline polymers. In this paper, two examples of unique applications of TREF were introduced. One was the study on the influence of extraction of internal donor on the variation of isospecific active sites of a MgCl2- supported Ziegler catalyst, and the other was the estimation of the relationship between polymer micro-tacticity and degradation rate of isotactic polypropylene (iPP). The former example revealed the conversion from high to low isospecific site by the extraction of internal donors, whereas the latter showed a negative correlation between the level of isotacticity and the degradation rate. These results demonstrated that TREF was useful in these research applications.  相似文献   

15.
结晶分级技术在支化聚乙烯研究中的应用   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
介绍了近年发展起来的几种结晶分级技术及其在支化聚乙烯结构表征及性能研究方面的应用。利用升温淋洗分级技术(TREF),可根据结晶特性的不同将高分子分离成多个分布较窄的级份,通过分别表征各级份的链结构,从而可获得高分子链结构方面较为准确的信息。基于差示扫描量热技术(DSC)发展起来的两类热分级技术,主要包括逐步结晶热分级(SC)和连续自成核退火分级(SSA)技术,虽然不能从物理上对高分子进行分级,但通过选择适当的操作参数,也能得到一系列与升温淋洗分级实验类似的链结构信息,并且具有设备简单、操作方便、样品用量少、耗时短等优点。本文结合我们自己的工作,对各种分级技术的原理、实验操作及应用进行了系统综述,并展望了结晶分级技术发展的某些可能趋势。  相似文献   

16.
Summary: New crystallization procedures have been developed for the analysis of the chemical composition distribution in polyolefins by pumping a small flow of solvent during the crystallization cycle. One of the new techniques, crystallization elution fractionation (CEF) combines the separation power of TREF and CRYSTAF and has been shown to provide very fast analysis of the composition distribution.  相似文献   

17.
Summary: Short chain branches distribution (SCBD) is the key factor for high density polyethylene (HDPE) pipe materials to achieve their excellent performance for long term (50 years) applications. However, the precise SCBD characterization of these HDPE materials with relatively low content of comonomer incorporation still remained as a challenge in this field. In this work, two characterization methods, namely temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) cross step crystallization (SC) (TREF + SC) and TREF cross 13C-NMR (TREF + 13C-NMR), have been respectively used to qualitatively and quantitatively investigate the SCBD for two HDPE pipe materials (PE-1 and PE-2 with different long term performances) with small amount of 1-hexene incorporation prepared from SiO2-supported silyl chromate catalyst system (S-2 catalyst) during UNIPOL gas phase polymerization. The comparison of SCBD between the two samples showed that: although short chain branches of PE-2 with good performance were less than those of PE-1 with bad performance, PE-2 showed less comonomer incorporation on the low crystallinity and low molecular weight (MW) fractions keeping even higher comonomer incorporation on the high crystallinity and high MW parts compared with PE-1. This difference on the SCBD for PE-1 and PE-2 was thought to be the key factor which is responsible for their great difference on environment slow crack resistance (ESCR). Moreover, TREF + SC method further reflected the intra- and inter-molecular heterogeneities of each fraction from the two HDPE samples through the lamella thickness distribution compared with TREF + 13C-NMR.  相似文献   

18.
Summary: The chemical composition distribution has been shown to be the most critical and discriminating parameter in understanding the performance of industrial polyolefins with non homogeneous comonomer incorporation. The chemical composition distribution is being analyzed by well known techniques such as temperature rising elution fractionation, TREF, crystallization analysis fractionation, CRYSTAF and crystallization elution fractionation, CEF. These techniques separate according to crystallizability and provide a powerful and predictable separation of components based on the presence of branches, irregularities or tacticity differences, independently of the molar mass. TREF, CRYSTAF and CEF can not be used, however, for the separation of more amorphous resins, and may not always provide the best solution for complex multi-component resins due to the existence of some co-crystallization. The application of high temperature interactive HPLC to polyolefins opened a new route to characterize these types of polymers. The use of solvent gradient HPLC for separation of polyethylene and polypropylene and the developments in HPLC on carbon based columns extended further the application of high temperature HPLC in polyolefins. A new approach has been developed recently using the carbon based column but replacing solvent gradient by a thermal gradient which facilitates the analysis of polyethylene copolymers and provides a powerful tool for the analysis of elastomers. Thermal gradient interaction chromatography (TGIC) is being compared with TREF and CEF with the analysis of model samples. The advantages/disadvantages of each technique are being investigated and discussed. The combination of TGIC and TREF/CEF provides an extended range of separation of polyolefins.  相似文献   

19.
Thermally pretreated catalysts were prepared by heating MgCl2/THF/TiCl4 (TT-0) at 80°C for 5 min (TT-1) and 60 min (TT-2), and at 108°C for 5 min (TT-3) and 60 min (TT-4). Ethylene–1-hexene copolymers were prepared with these catalysts. The TT-1 catalyst produced more blocky and higher 1-hexene content polymer than TT-0, 2, 3, and 4. Temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF) analysis was used to investigate the chemical composition distribution of the ethylene–1-hexene copolymer, exhibiting bimodal distribution for TT-0 and trimodal for TT-1, 2, 3, and 4. A portion of higher hexene content of the copolymer markedly increased when the copolymerization was performed with TT-1, indicating that copolymerization active sites were newly generated. Portion of homopolyethylene increased drastically when the copolymerization was performed with TT-4, indicating that ethylene homopolymerization active sites were increased. Gel permeation chromatography (GPC) also revealed that three kinds of active sites existed on the catalyst. 13C-NMR spectrum of each fraction after TREF analysis suggested that the isospecific active site could polymerize 1-hexene well, resulting in random and alternating copolymers. A scheme for generation of the active site and change of its nature during thermal treatment of bimetallic complex catalyst is proposed. © 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci A: Polym Chem 36: 291–300, 1998  相似文献   

20.
Heterogeneous Ziegler-Natta catalysts produce polyolefins that have broad distributions of molecular weight (MWD) and chemical composition (CCD). For such broad distributions, mathematical models are useful to quantify the information provided by polyolefin analytical techniques such as high-temperature gel permeation chromatography (GPC), temperature rising elution fractionation (TREF), and crystallization analysis fractionation (CRYSTAF). In this paper, we developed a mathematical model to deconvolute the MWD and CCD of polyolefins simultaneously, using Flory's most probable distribution and the cumulative CCD component of Stockmayer's distribution. We have applied this procedure to “model” polyolefin resins and to one industrial linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) resin. The proposed methodology is able to deconvolute theoretical distributions even when random noise is added to the MWDs and CCDs, and it can be used to calculate the minimum number of active site types on heterogeneous Ziegler-Natta catalysts.  相似文献   

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