화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.45, No.15, 1959-1969, 2007
Lamellar structural changes in miscible crystalline polymer blends during melting and crystallization processes, as studied by real-time small-angle X-ray scattering measurements
Real-time small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) measurement using synchrotron radiation was applied to study the lamellar structural changes in miscible crystalline polymer blends of poly(1,4-butylene succinate) (PBSU) and poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) during melting and crystallization processes. The lamella of PBSU is either included in the interlamellar region of PVDF (interlamellar inclusion structure), or rejected from the interlamellar region of PVDF (interlamellar exclusion structure). The two lamellar structures coexists in the melt-quenched samples of the PBSU/PVDF = 30/70 blend. Only the interlamellar exclusion structure exists in the drawn films of the PBSU/PVDF = 30/70 blend. The real-time SAXS results show that the interlamellar exclusion structure in these samples is irreversibly transformed into the interlamellar inclusion structure by heating the sample above the melting temperature of PBSU and that the PBSU chains are crystallized between the lamellae of PVDF during the cooling process. The factors controlling the lamellar structural changes are possibly a balance of the miscibility and the chain exclusion by tie-molecules and/or the chain diffusion under confinement by the lamellae of PVDF with higher melting temperature. (c) 2007 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.