Tuesday, July 24, 2012

1207.5452 (J. Sellares et al.)

Dielectric study of the glass transition of PET/PEN blends    [PDF]

J. Sellares, J. A. Diego, J. C. Canadas, M. Mudarra, J. Belana, P. Colomer, F. Roman, Y. Calventus
An analysis of the glass transition of four materials with similar chemical structures is performed: PET, PEN and two PET/PEN blends (90/10 and 70/30 w/w). During the melt processing of the blends transesterification reactions yield block and random PET/PEN copolymers that act as compatibilizers. The blends obtained in this way have been characterized by $^1$H-NMR and DSC. A randomness of 0.38 and 0.26 has been found for the 90/10 and 70/30 copolymers. It is shown by DSC that this copolimerization is enough to compatibilize the blends. The $\alpha$ relaxation, the dielectric manifestation of the glass transition, has been studied by TSDC. The relaxation has been analyzed into its elementary modes by means of a relaxation map analysis. The activation energies of the modes of the glass transition do not change significantly between the four materials: in all cases the modes with a larger contribution have around 3eV and modes with less than 1eV are not detected. The change in the pre-exponential factor accounts entirely for the relaxation time change from material to material, that is larger as the PEN content increases. The compensation law is fulfilled and a compensation point is likely to exist. The polarizability decreases as the PEN content increases due to the increased stiffness of the polymer backbone. An analysys of the cooperativity shows that the central modes of the distribution are the most cooperative while high-frequency modes tend to behave more as Arrhenius. The low-frequency modes are difficult to study due to the asymmetry of the distribution of relaxation times. PEN turns out to be the less cooperative material. It is demonstrated how the parameters obtained from the dielectric study are able to reproduce calorimetric data from DSC scans and are, therefore, a valid description of the glass transition.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1207.5452

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