Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-28-2008
Abstract
The present article describes experimental and theoretical investigations of miscibility and crystallization behavior of blends of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and triacrylate monomer (TA) using differential scanning calorimetry and optical microscopy. The PEO/TA blends manifested a single T(g) varying systematically with composition suggestive of a miscible character in their amorphous states. Moreover, there occurs melting point depression of PEO crystals with increasing TA. A phase diagram was subsequently established that exhibited a solid+liquid coexistence region bound by the liquidus and solidus lines, followed by an upper critical solution temperature (UCST) at a lower temperature. The emerging phase morphology was investigated to verify the coexistence regions. Upon photopolymerization in the isotropic melt above the melting point depression curve, both the UCST and the melting temperatures move upward and eventually surpass the reaction temperature, resulting in phase separation as well as crystallization of PEO driven by the changing supercooling, i.e., the thermodynamic driving force. Of particular interest is the interplay between photopolymerization-induced phase separation and crystallization, which eventually determines the final phase morphology of the PEO/TA blend such as crystalline lamellae, sheaf, or spherulites in isotropic liquid, phase separated domains, and viscous fingering liquids.
Publication Title
Journal of Chemical Physics
Volume
129
Issue
24
Required Publisher's Statement
Copyright 2008 American Institute of Physics. The original published version of this article may be found at http://dx.doi.org/10.1063/1.3040279.
Recommended Citation
Park, Soo Jeoung and Kyu, Thein, "Photopolymerization-Induced Crystallization and Phase Separation in Poly(Ethylene Oxide)/Triacrylate Blends" (2008). College of Polymer Science and Polymer Engineering. 55.
https://ideaexchange.uakron.edu/polymer_ideas/55