Abstract: | Treatment of a cyclohexane solution of low density polyethylene and polystyrene with anhydrous aluminum chloride causes chemical reaction between the two polymers which results in the formation of a graft copolymer. The initial copolymer-forming reaction is very rapid, and prolonged contact of the polymers with aluminum chloride causes subsequent degradation in molecular weight. Treatment of separate solutions of polyethylene, isotactic polypropylene, and ethylene–propylene copolymers with aluminum chloride was studied as a function of time. The intrinsic viscosities of the polymers dropped from initial values of 2.4–6.5 to 0.55–0.85 in 5 min, followed by a slower decline over the next 2 hr. In the case of polypropylene, the low molecular weight fragments largely retained the isotactic structure, which demonstrates that stereochemical isomerization is not a major reaction. |