Abstract: | By means of electron microscopy of surface replicas and both small-angle and wide-angle x-ray scattering, nylon 6 fibers were investigated in the as-spun state, after drawing at 180°C to a draw ratio up to 4.95, and after subsequent annealing. As spun, the fiber exhibits a small fraction of row-nucleated cylindrites and a great many spherulites (with an average diameter of a few microns) side by side. Drawing deforms the spherulites into spindle-shaped structures (λ = 2) and subsequently produces well-aligned microfibrils. Small-angle x-ray scattering yields a two-point diagram at small λ and a fourpoint diagram at high λ. The long period seems to decrease slightly with draw ratio. Annealing at temperatures above the temperature of drawing increases the long period to a greater extent with samples of lower λ. The crystal lattice orientation is nearly complete at λ = 4.95. |