2007 APS March Meeting
Volume 52, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 5–9, 2007;
Denver, Colorado
Session D4: Polymer Crystallization: 50 years of Chain Folding
2:30 PM–5:30 PM,
Monday, March 5, 2007
Colorado Convention Center
Room: Korbel 2B-3B
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPOLY
Chair: Buck Crist, Northwestern University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2007.MAR.D4.4
Abstract: D4.00004 : Laws controlling crystallization and melting in bulk polymers
4:18 PM–4:54 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Gert Strobl
(University Freiburg)
When the fundamentals of the structure of semi-crystalline
polymers - layer-like crystallites with fold surfaces being
embedded in an amorphous matrix - were revealed in the Fifties,
considerations about the mechanism of formation started
immediately. In the Sixties and Seventies, they became a major
field of research and a focus of interest. In the years which
followed the approach put forward by Hoffman, Lauritzen and their
co-workers [1] gained superiority. The picture envisaged by the
treatment - a crystalline lamella with an ordered fold surface and
smooth lateral faces, growing layer by layer with a secondary
nucleation as rate determining step - is easy to grasp and yields
simple relationships. Supercooling below the equilibrium melting
point $T_{\rm f}^{\infty}$ is the control parameter determining
both the thickness $d_{\rm c}$ and the lateral growth rate of the
crystallites $G$.
Experiments carried out during the last decade provided new
insights and are now completely changing the understanding. They
showed in particular \\- that $d_{\rm c}$ is inversely
proportional to the distance to a temperature $T_{\rm c}^{\infty}$
distinctly above $T_{\rm f}^{\infty}$\\- that the activation
energy determining $G$ diverges at a temperature
$T_{\rm zero}$ clearly below $T_{\rm f}^{\infty}$.\\
Further simple relationships concern\\
- recrystallization processes: $d_{\rm c}$ is again inversely
proportional to the distance to $T_{\rm c}^{\infty}$\\
- the extension of ordered regions within the lamellar
crystallites: it is proportional to $d_{\rm c}$.
We interpret the observations as indication that the pathway
followed in the growth of polymer crystallites includes an
intermediate phase of mesomorphic character. A thin layer with
mesomorphic inner structure forms between the lateral crystal face
and the melt, stabilized by epitaxial forces. The first step in
the growth process is an attachment of chain sequences from the
melt onto the growth face of the mesomorphic layer. The high
mobility of the chains in the layer allows a spontaneous
thickening, up to a critical thickness, where the layer solidifies
under formation of block-like crystallites. The last step is a
perfectioning of the crystallites, leading to a further
stabilization. We constructed a thermodynamic scheme dealing with
the transitions between melt, mesomorphic layers and lamellar
crystallites, assuming for the latter ones that they exist both in
an initial \lq native\rq~and a final \lq stabilized\rq~form.
$T_{\rm c}^{\infty}$ and $T_{\rm zero}$ are identified with the
temperatures $T_{\rm mc}$ and $T_{\rm am}$ of the (hidden)
transitions mesomorphic $\rightarrow $ crystalline and
amorphous$\rightarrow $ mesomorphic, respectively. Application of
the scheme in a quantitative evaluation of small angle X-ray
scattering and calorimetric results yields the equilibrium
transition temperatures between the various phases, latent heats
of transition and surface free energies [2].
[1] J.D Hoffman, G.T Davis, and J.I. Lauritzen.
\newblock In {\em Treatise on Solid State Chemistry {\rm Vol.3,
N.B.Hannay Ed.}}, page 497. Plenum, 1976.
[2] G.~Strobl.\newblock {\em Eur.Phys.J.E}, 18:295, 2005.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2007.MAR.D4.4