Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
Dynamic mechanical thermal analysis performed on cold-drawn polyethylene terephthalate PET, cold crystallized annealed in the temperature interval 100140 C, reveals the presence of marginally glassy domains above the annealing temperature Ta. This suggests that the thermodynamic force driving crystallization causes the structural arrest of some nonncrystalline domains. The latter thus need a temperature higher than
Ta to completely defreeze. Differential scanning calorimetry supports this point of view. Analogous investigations on unoriented PET, cold crystallized in the same conditions, do not show the same peculiarities; thus, chain orientation is relevant to vitrification. This phenomenology is first cast in the language of thermodynamics by introducing an excess chemical potential delta mu describing the presence of structural constraints in the amorphous domains and the effect of chain orientation. For a first test of this picture, the orientation contribution to delta mu is calculated by means of the Gaussian chain model this implicitly assumes that delta mu is related to the density fluctuations. The resulting expression is then used to discuss the structural differences between cold-drawn and unoriented PET samples reported in the literature.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
segmental relaxation; confinement; glass transition; crystallization; polymers
List of contributors:
Pieruccini, Marco; DI MARCO, Gaetano
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