화학공학소재연구정보센터
Polymer, Vol.51, No.12, 2520-2526, 2010
The effect of prepolymer crystallinity on solid-state polymerization of poly(bisphenol A carbonate)
The effect of prepolymer crystallinity on the solid-state polymerization (SSP) of poly(bisphenol A carbonate) was examined using nitrogen as a sweep fluid. A low-molecular-weight prepolymer was synthesized by melt transesterification and prepolymers with different crystallinities (11.7%, 23.3%, 33.7%) were prepared with supercritical carbon dioxide treatment. SSP of the three prepolymers was then carried out at reaction temperatures in the range of 150-190 degrees C, with a prepolymer particle size of 75 pm and a N-2 flow rate of 1600 ml/min. The glass-transition temperature (T-g), absolute weight-average molecular weight (M-n), and percent crystallinity were measured at various times during each SSP. At each reaction temperature. SSP of the lower crystallinity prepolymer (11.7%) always resulted in higher-molecular-weight polymers, compared with the polymers synthesized using the higher crystallinity prepolymer (23.3% and 33.7%). The crystallinity of the polymers synthesized from the high crystallinity prepolymer was significantly higher than for those synthesized from the low crystallinity prepolymer. Higher crystallinity of the prepolymer and the synthesized polymers may lower the reaction rate by reducing chain-end mobility or/and by inhibiting byproduct diffusion. (C) 2010 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.