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1.
The double melting behavior of a thermotropic liquid crystalline polyimide was studied by means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), polarized light microscopy (PLM), transmission electron microscopy (TEM), wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD), and small‐angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS). This liquid crystalline polyimide exhibited a normal melting peak around 278 °C and transformed into a smectic A phase. The smectic A phase changed to nematic phase upon heating to 298 °C, then became isotropic melt around 345 °C. The samples annealed or isothermally crystallized at lower temperature showed double melting endotherms during heating scan. The annealing‐induced melting endotherm was highly dependent on annealing conditions, whereas the normal melting endotherm was almost not influenced by annealing when the annealing temperature was low. Various possibilities for the lower melting endotherm are discussed. The equilibrium melting points of both melting peaks were extrapolated to be 283.2 °C. Combined analytical results showed that the double melting peaks were from the melting of the two types of crystallites generated from two crystallization processes: a slow and a fast one. Fast crystallization may start from the well‐aligned liquid crystal domains, whereas the slow one may be from the fringed or amorphous regions. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 38: 3018–3031, 2000  相似文献   

2.
The melting behavior of poly(L ‐lactic acid) film crystallized from the glassy state, either isothermally or nonisothermally, was studied by wide angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD), small angle X‐ray scattering (SAXS), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), and temperature‐modulated differential scanning calorimetry (TMDSC). Up to three crystallization and two melting peaks were observed. It was concluded that these effects could largely be accounted for on the basis of a “melt‐recrystallization” mechanism. When molecular weight is low, two melting endotherms are readily observed. But, without TMDSC, the double melting phenomena of high molecular weight PLLA is often masked by an exotherm just prior to the final melting, as metastable crystals undergo melt‐recrystallization during heating in the DSC. The appearance of a double cold‐crystallization peak during the DSC heating scan of amorphous PLLA film is the net effect of cold crystallization and melt‐recrystallization of metastable crystals formed during the initial cold crystallization. Samples cold‐crystallized at 80 and 90 °C did not exhibit a long period, although substantial crystallinity developed. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 44: 3200–3214, 2006  相似文献   

3.
Blends of poly(L ‐lactic acid) (PLA) and poly(butylene succinate) (PBS) were prepared in various compositions via melt mixing, and the morphological changes were investigated with differential scanning calorimetry and synchrotron wide‐angle and small‐angle X‐ray scattering techniques at a heating rate of 10 °C/min. Differential scanning calorimetry thermograms of PLA/PBS blends showed two distinct melting peaks over the entire composition range. The exothermal peak for PLA shifted significantly to a lower temperature and overlapped with that of PBS around 100 °C. A depression of the melting point of the PLA component via blending was observed. The synchrotron wide‐angle X‐ray scattering during heating revealed that there was no cocrystallization or crystal modification via blending. The synchrotron small‐angle X‐ray scattering data showed that well‐defined double‐scattering peaks (or peaks with a clear scattering shoulder) appeared during crystallization, indicating that this system possessed dual lamellar stacks. These peaks were deconvoluted into two components with a peak separation computer program, and then the morphological parameters of each component were obtained by means of the correlation function. The long period and average lamellar thickness of the two components before melting decreased with an increasing content of the other polymer component. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 40: 1931–1939, 2002  相似文献   

4.
The complex thermal behavior of poly(l ‐lactic acid) films crystallized from the melt, either isothermally or nonisothermally, was studied by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), wide angle X‐ray diffraction, and small angle X‐ray scattering. The variation of the thermal behavior with crystallization temperature, time, and cooling rate was documented and analyzed. After nonisothermal crystallization at low cooling rates that develop high crystallinity, an obvious double melting peak appears at modest heating rates (e.g., 10 °C/min). At higher heating rates, these samples exhibit only single melting. However, an unusual form of double melting occurs under the majority of the conditions studied under either isothermal or nonisothermal conditions. In this case, double melting is marked by the appearance of a recrystallization exotherm just prior to the final melting that obscures the observation of the melting of the crystals formed during the initial crystallization process. The occurrence of double melting in melt‐crystallized samples was concluded to be the result of a melt‐recrystallization process occurring during the subsequent DSC heating scan; it is a function of crystalline perfection, not the initial crystallinity, nor whether or not the crystallization reached completion at the crystallization temperature. Many other very interesting observations are also discussed. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 44: 3378–3391, 2006  相似文献   

5.
We here reported the dual melting behaviors with a large temperature difference more than 50 °C without discernible recrystallization endothermic peak in isomorphous poly(3‐hydroxybutyrate‐co‐3‐hydroxyvalerate) (P(HB‐co‐HV)) with a high HV content of 36.2 mol %, and the structure evolution upon heating was monitored by in situ synchrotron wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction/small‐angle X‐ray scattering (WAXD/SAXS) to unveil the essence of such double endothermic phenomena. It illustrated that the thinner lamellae with the larger unit cell and the thicker crystals having the smaller unit cell were melted around the first low and second high melting ranges, respectively. By analyzing in situ WAXD/SAXS data, and then coupling the features of melting behavior, the evolution of the parameters of both crystal unit cell and lamellar crystals, we proposed that the thinner unstable lamellae possess a uniform structure with HV units total inclusion, and the thicker stable lamellae reflect the sandwich structure with HV units partial inclusion. It further affirmed that the thicker sandwich and thinner uniform lamellae formed during the cooling and subsequent isothermal crystallization processes, respectively. These findings fully verify that it is the change of structure of lamellae rather than the melting/recrystallization that is responsible for double melting peaks of isomorphous P(HB‐co‐36.2%HV), and enhance our understanding upon multiple endothermic behaviors of polymers. © 2019 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 2019 , 57, 1453–1461  相似文献   

6.
A new aryl polyester, poly(pentamethylene terephthalate) (PPT) with five methylene groups in the repeat unit, was synthesized. Its multiple‐melting behavior and crystal structure were analyzed with differential scanning calorimetry and wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction. In addition, the spherulitic/lamellar morphology of melt‐crystallized PPT was investigated. Typical Maltese‐cross spherulites (with no rings) were seen in melt‐crystallized PPT at low temperatures (70–90 °C), but ring patterns were seen in PPT crystallized only at temperatures ranging from 100 to 115 °C, whereas rings disappeared with crystallization above 120 °C. The mechanisms of the rings in PPT were explained with several coordinated directional changes (wavy changes, twisting changes, and combinations) in the lamellae during growth. Scanning electron microscopy, in combination with atomic force microscopy, further proved that the ringed spherulites originated from the aggregation of sufficient numbers of edge‐on lamellar crystals; the radial‐growth edge‐on/flat‐on lamellae could be twisted and/or waved to form realistic band patterns. A postulated model properly described a possible origin of the ring bands through combined mechanisms of waving (zigzagging) and twisting (spiraling) of the lamellae during crystallization. Superimposed twisting and/or wavy models during crystallization were examined as examples. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 42: 4421–4432, 2004  相似文献   

7.
The origin of double melting behavior of poly(p‐phenylene succinate) (PPSc) was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction. As‐polymerized PPSc showed two melting peaks: the low melting (LM) and high melting (HM) peaks at 286 and 311 °C, respectively. When PPSc was annealed at 270 °C, the LM peak constantly shifted toward higher temperatures and grew in its area with annealing time, and eventually merged into the HM peak located at 308 °C. X‐ray diffractograms of PPSc annealed at 270 °C became sharper with increasing the annealing time while the peak positions did not change. The X‐ray diffractograms obtained from the LM and the HM peak exhibited the same diffraction peaks. It was concluded from these results that the double melting behavior of PPSc is due to the distribution of crystals having the same crystal form but differing in size and perfection. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 38: 1868–1871, 2000  相似文献   

8.
The preparation and properties of poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF)/clay nanocomposites are reported for the first time. PVDF/clay nanocomposites were prepared by melt intercalation with organophilic clay. The composites were characterized with X‐ray diffraction, differential scanning calorimetry, and dynamic mechanical analysis. X‐ray diffraction results indicated intercalation of the polymer into the interlayer spacing. PVDF in the nanocomposites crystallized in the β form. Differential scanning calorimetry nonisothermal curves showed an increase in the melting and crystallization temperatures along with a decrease in crystallinity, as evidenced by the melting and crystallization peaks. Isothermal crystallization studies showed an enhanced rate of crystallization with the addition of clay, as evidenced by a reduction in the crystallization time. Dynamic mechanical analysis indicated significant improvements in the storage modulus over a temperature range of ?100 to 150 °C. The tan δ peak signifying the glass‐transition temperature of PVDF shifted to higher temperatures. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 40: 1682–1689, 2002  相似文献   

9.
Polymorphic crystals and complex multiple melting behavior in an aliphatic biodegradable polyester, poly(butylene adipate) (PBA), were thoroughly examined by wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD) and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC). Further clarification on mechanisms of multiple melting peaks related to polymorphic crystal forms in PBA was attempted. More stable α‐form crystal is normally favored for crystallization from melt at higher temperatures (31–35 °C), or upon slow cooling from the melt; while the β‐form is the favored species for crystallization at low temperatures (25–28 °C). We further proved that PBA crystallization could also result in all α‐form even at low temperatures (25–28 °C) if it crystallized with the presence of prior α‐form nuclei. PBA packed with both crystal forms could display as many as four melting peaks (P1 ? P4, in ascending temperature order). However, PBA initially containing only the α‐crystal exhibited dual melting peaks of P1 and P3, which are attributed to dual lamellar distributions of the α‐crystal. By contrast, PBA initially containing only the β‐crystal could also exhibit dual melting peaks (P2 and P4) upon scanning. While P2 is clearly associated with melting of the initial β‐crystal, the fourth melting peak (P4), appearing rather broad, was determined to be associated with superimposed thermal events of crystal transformation from β‐ to α‐crystal and final re‐melting of the new re‐organized α‐crystal. Crystal transformation from one to the other or vice versa, lamellae thickening, annealing at molten state, and influence on crystal polymorphism in PBA were analyzed. Relationships and mechanisms of dual peaks for isolate α‐ or β‐crystals in PBA are discussed. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 1662–1672, 2005  相似文献   

10.
Poly(L ‐lactide) (PLLA)/multiwall carbon nanotube (MWNT) composites were prepared by the solvent‐ultrasonic‐casting method. Only very low concentrations of MWNTs (<0.08 wt %) were added in the composites. Isothermal and nonisothermal crystalline measurements were carried out on PLLA/MWNT composites to investigate the effect of MWNTs on PLLA crystalline behavior. DSC results showed that the incorporation of MWNTs significantly shortened the crystalline induction time and increased the final crystallinity of the composite, which indicated MWNTs have a strong nucleation effect on PLLA even at very low concentrations. The nonisothermal crystallization measurements showed that the MWNTs greatly speed up crystallization during cooling. From isothermal crystallization results, both PLLA and PLLA/MWNT composites samples closely followed a relationship based on Lauritzen‐Hoffman theory, with the regime II to III transition shifting to lower temperature with increasing MWNT concentration. A double melting peak appeared in both nonisothermal and isothermal measurements. The conditions under which it appeared were found to closely depend on the regime II‐III transition temperature obtained from Lauritzen‐Hoffman theory. From the magnitude and position of melting peaks, it is proposed that the double melting peak is caused by a disorder‐order crystal phase transition. © 2009 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 47: 2341–2352, 2009  相似文献   

11.
The double melting behavior of poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) was studied with differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and wide‐angle X‐ray analysis. DSC melting curves of melt‐crystallized PBT samples, which we prepared by cooling from the melt (250 °C) at various cooling rates, showed two endothermic peaks and an exothermic peak located between these melting peaks. The cooling rate effect on these peaks was investigated. The melt‐crystallized PBT sample cooled at 24 K min?1 was heated at a rate of 1 K min?1, and its diffraction patterns were obtained successively at a rate of one pattern per minute with an X‐ray measurement system equipped with a position‐sensitive proportional counter. The diffraction pattern did not change in the melting process, except for the change in its peak height. This suggests that the double melting behavior does not originate from a change in the crystal structure. The temperature dependence of the diffraction intensity was obtained from the diffraction patterns. With increasing temperature, the intensity decreased gradually in the low‐temperature region and then increased distinctly before a steep decrease due to the final melting. In other words, the temperature‐dependence curve of the diffraction intensity showed a peak that is interpreted as proof of the recrystallization in the melting process. The peak temperature was 216 °C. The temperature‐dependence curve of the enthalpy change obtained by the integration of the DSC curve almost coincided with that of the diffraction intensity. The double melting behavior in the heating process of PBT is concluded to originate from the increase of crystallinity, that is, recrystallization. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 39: 2005–2015, 2001  相似文献   

12.
The melting behavior of poly(butylene succinate‐co‐adipate) (PBSA) isothermally crystallized from the melt was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. Triple, double, or single melting endotherms were observed in subsequent heating scan for the samples isothermally crystallized at different temperatures. These endothermic peaks were labeled as I, II, and III for low‐, middle‐, and high‐temperature melting endotherms, respectively. The independence of endotherm III to the crystallization temperature, the existence of an exothermic crystallization peak just below the endotherm III, and the heating rate dependence of endotherm III indicated that endotherm III was due to the remelting of recrystallized lamellar during a heating scan. The influence of crystallization time on the melting behavior of PBSA showed that endotherms II and III developed prior to endotherm I; endotherm III developed rather simultaneously with endotherm II. Further investigation showed that the peak temperature of endotherm I increased linearly with the logarithm of the crystallization time. It suggested that endotherm II was attributed to the melting of the primary lamellae, while endotherm I was due to the melting of secondary lamellae. © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 3077–3082, 2005  相似文献   

13.
Of the three melting peaks typical of a propylene–ethylene random copolymer (with 5.1 wt % ethylene) crystallized between 110 and 140 °C, the two higher peaks result from primary and secondary isothermal crystallization, whereas the material crystallized on cooling gives the lowest peak. In contrast to polypropylene homopolymers, which show strong morphological changes developing from the center of a spherulite, copolymer specimens are uniformly crosshatched. The highest melting peak is related to an open crosshatched framework of primary lamellae, and the next lower peak is related to later forming subsidiary lamellae filling the intervening space. The origin and nature of these double peaks are discussed in terms of the fractional crystallization and the ensuing constraints placed on isothermal lamellar thickening as a result of the exclusion of the comonomer from the polypropylene lattice. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 42: 3318–3332, 2004  相似文献   

14.
Thermal stability, crystallization, morphological development, subsequently melting, and crystallinity control of a syndiotactic 1,2‐polybutadiene sample were carefully carried out by thermogravimetry (TGA), polarized optical microscopy (POM), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), temperature‐modulated differential scanning calorimetry (TMDSC), and wide‐angle X‐ray diffraction (WAXD), respectively. The experiments indicate that thermal cross‐linking reaction rates under nitrogen protection and in air are different for this polymer at temperature above 155 °C. Under nitrogen protection, the thermal cross‐linking reaction rate is delayed and the mechanism of melt crystallization obtained from the DSC results is in good accordance with that from POM observation. TMDSC results indicate that melting–recrystallization–melting model is more proper to explain the double melting events of this sample. At the same time, the evolution of the degree of crystallinity as the function of the time was investigated by WAXD profiles for the samples firstly crystallized at 145 °C for 1 h and then kept at 163 °C mediated between the temperatures of the double peaks. It shows that as prolonging the annealing time at 163 °C thermal cross‐linking reactions possibly occur, leading to gradual reduction of the apparent crystallite sizes, evaluated by Scherrer equation and the degree of crystallinity. The changing sequence of the relative intensity of the stronger four diffraction peaks with time due to thermal cross‐linking reactions is (111)/(201) > (210) > (010) > (200)/(110). © 2005 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 43: 2885–2897, 2005  相似文献   

15.
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   

16.
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   

17.
This article deals with the structure, crystallization, morphology, and thermal behavior of poly(p‐phenylene sulfide) (PPS) with low‐molecular mass, probed by DSC, optical, and electron microscopy. The growth rates of spherulites were measured over the temperature range 235–275°C. A regime II–III transition was found at T = 250°C. The regime transition was accompanied by a morphological change from sheaflike structure to classical spherulites. The Avrami equation poorly described the isothermal crystallization of PPS, for the occurrence of mixed growth mechanisms and secondary crystallization, in agreement with the morphology and the thermal behavior. Two melting peaks were detected on DSC curves and attributed to the melting of crystals formed isothermally at Tc by primary and secondary crystallization. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 39: 415–424, 2001  相似文献   

18.
The melting behavior and crystallization kinetics of poly(2‐hydroxyethoxybenzoate) (PHEBA) 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. By the application of the Hoffman–Weeks method to the melting temperatures of isothermally crystallized samples, a value of 232 °C was obtained for the equilibrium melting temperature. Isothermal crystallization kinetics were analyzed according to Avrami's treatment. Values of Avrami's exponent n close to 3 were obtained, independently of the crystallization temperature, in agreement with a crystallization process originating from predetermined nuclei and characterized by three‐dimensional spherulitic growth. In fact, space‐filling banded spherulites were observed by hot‐stage optical microscopy at all crystallization temperatures explored, with the band spacing increasing with increasing crystallization temperature. The rate of crystallization became lower as the crystallization temperature increased as usual at low undercooling, with the crystallization process controlled by nucleation. The equilibrium heat of fusion was determined by differential scanning calorimetry and wide‐angle X‐ray scattering measurements. Finally, the crystal phase of PHEBA was investigated with wide‐angle X‐ray scattering, and a triclinic unit cell was hypothesized. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 40: 1354–1362, 2002  相似文献   

19.
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   

20.
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   

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