Search results for "Styrene"

showing 10 items of 561 documents

Solution properties of polyelectrolytes

1991

Abstract Chromatographic data for sodium polystyrene sulphonate were obtained on both silica- and polymer-based size-exclusion supports using mobile phases of various pH and ionic strength. Deviations of the elution volume were observed towards both lower and higher values relative to the reference calibration graph obtained with uncharged standards. An empirical correlation is proposed in order to account for all the secondary effects observed. The general applicability of this correlation was further tested for chromatographic data obtained for a series of peptides and proteins on a silica-based support under very different eluent conditions. Deviations from ideal elution behaviour such a…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyAqueous solutionCalibration curveChemistryElutionSodiumSize-exclusion chromatographyOrganic ChemistryInorganic chemistryAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementGeneral MedicinePolymerBiochemistryPolyelectrolyteAnalytical Chemistrychemistry.chemical_compoundColumn chromatographyIonic strengthSodium nitratePhase (matter)Ideal (ring theory)Sodium polystyrene sulphonateJournal of Chromatography A
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1988

An apparatus for turbidimetric measurements of demixing temperatures under shear flow is presented, and the results of experiments with trans-decahydronaphthalene/polystyrene (TD/PS) solutions, investigating molecular weights ranging from 100 kg/mol to 1770 kg/mol, are compared with viscometric data. It is found that the sign and magnitude of shear effects depend on molecular weight (Mw), polymer concentration (c2), and shear rate (). For the first time, it was possible to study a solution which exhibits shear dissolution at low shear rates but shear demixing at high shear rates.

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyChemistryConcentration effectThermodynamicsPolymerPure shearShear ratechemistry.chemical_compoundShear (geology)Polymer chemistryShear stressPolystyreneShear flowDie Makromolekulare Chemie
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Precipitation chromatography. III. Optimization of the experimental conditions and determination of the polydispersity of fractions

1974

The influence of the solvent–nonsolvent gradient and the temperature gradient on the efficiency of the precipitation chromatography is investigated with radically and anionically prepared polystyrene samples. Only a combination of both gradients gives optimal effectiveness of the column. The separating power of the column was determined by using mixtures of well defined samples. From the elution curves of the mixtures the nonuniformity Ufr of fractions can be estimated. For fractions of anionically prepared polystyrenes Ufr is on the average 0.001; this value is of the same order of magnitude as the statistical error. These results show that with this chromatographic method it is possible t…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyElutionChemistryPrecipitation (chemistry)DispersityGeneral EngineeringAnalytical chemistryPolymerTemperature gradientchemistry.chemical_compoundPolystyreneWell-definedOrder of magnitudeJournal of Polymer Science: Polymer Physics Edition
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Preparation of monodisperse polyethylene oxides by gel permeation chromatography of discontinuous polymer-homologous series

1970

Abstract Starting from triethylene glycol, monodisperse polyethylene oxides of a molecular weight (MW) up to 2000 (degree of polymerisation (DP) During the first step the ditosylate of triethylene glycol is reacted with the sodium alkoxide of the same diol at room temperature. The condesation product (polymer homologues of triethylene glycol) was separated by molecular distillation and yielded the pure oligomers nonaethylene glycol (DP = 9, MW 414) and pentadecaethylene glycol (DP = 15, MW = 678), as proved by gel chromatography. During the next step the polymer homologues of nonaethylene glycol were synthesised in a similar way. The pure oligomers hepteicosa (DP = 27, MW = 1207) and pentat…

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyOrganic ChemistryDispersityDiolGeneral MedicinePolymerDivinylbenzeneBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryGel permeation chromatographychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymerizationPolymer chemistryPolystyreneTriethylene glycolJournal of Chromatography A
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Effect of polystyrene coating on pore, structural and chromatographic properties of silica packings

1990

Abstract A series of mesoporous and macroporous silicas with a mean pore diameter (PD), between 6 and 200 nm were reacted with a copolymer of styrene and vinyl-methyldiethoxysilane. The mass load of coated silicas corresponded to the monolayer capacity of the polymer calculated on the basis of the molecular cross-sectional area, except for the two mesoporous silcias of PD = 6 and 7.5 nm. Depending on the pore size, changes occurred in the specific surface area, as, between the native and the coated product. A comparison of the specific pore volume, νp, of silicas before and after polymer immobilization indicated a major loss of νp for the two mesoporous silicas whereas this effect was much …

chemistry.chemical_classificationChromatographyOrganic ChemistryGeneral MedicinePolymerengineering.materialBiochemistryAnalytical ChemistryStyrenechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryCoatingSpecific surface areaMonolayerCopolymerengineeringPolystyreneMesoporous materialJournal of Chromatography A
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1978

The phenomenon of co-nonsolvency, i.e. the formation of nonsolvents by mixing two solvents, was studied for the system N,N-dimethylformamide/cyclohexane/polystyrene (DMF/CH/PS) which is characterized by the fact that the components of the mixed solvent are only incompletely miscible below 48,6°C. A number of quasibinary sections (stepwise addition of the second solvent to given solutions of the polymer in the first solvent) for a sample (M = 110000) of high molecular uniformity yielded a cloud point surface which gives “island curves” (closed solubility gaps) for constant temperatures between the critical temperature of DMF/CH and the top of the cloud point surface (51,3°C). The attainment …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCloud pointCyclohexaneAnalytical chemistryPolymerLight scatteringSolventPartition coefficientchemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymer chemistryOrganic chemistryPolystyreneSolubilityDie Makromolekulare Chemie
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Shear Effects on the Phase Diagrams of Solutions of Highly Incompatible Polymers in a Common Solvent. 2. Experiment and Theory

1997

Cloud point temperatures (Tcp) were measured at different constant shear rates for three representatives of the ternary system cyclohexanone/polystyrene/poly(n-butyl methacrylate) (CHO/PS/PBMA) by means of a newly constructed rheo-optical apparatus that can be operated in the temperature range from 0 to 100 °C up to maximum shear rates of 1440 s-1 and maximum stresses of 384 Pa. In all cases one observes an extension of the homogeneous region as the shear rate γ is raised. With the system CHO/PS 196w/PBMA 2050 (the figures denote the molar masses of the polymers in kilograms/mole) the effects become maximum for high concentrations of PBMA, where the demixing temperatures increase by more th…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCloud pointTernary numeral systemMolar massPolymers and PlasticsOrganic ChemistryThermodynamicsPolymerAtmospheric temperature rangeInorganic ChemistryShear ratechemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryPolystyrenePhase diagramMacromolecules
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Shear Effects on the Phase Diagrams of Solutions of Highly Incompatible Polymers in a Common Solvent. 1. Equilibrium Behavior and Rheological Propert…

1997

Phase diagrams (cloud points, tie lines, critical compositions) and viscosities of homogeneous solutions were determined at temperatures ranging from 20 to 100 °C for three representatives of the ternary system cyclohexanone/polystyrene/poly(n-butyl methacrylate) [CHO/PS/PBMA] in preparation of a study on shear influences. An only moderate increase of the two-phase region observed upon heating (LCST behavior) witnesses little heat effects upon mixing. Tie lines which are nearly parallel to the PS/PBMA edge of the Gibbs phase triangle indicate comparable solvent quality of CHO for both polymers. The quantitative mathematical description of the equilibrium behavior-required for a theoretical …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCloud pointTernary numeral systemPolymers and PlasticsChemistryOrganic ChemistryThermodynamicsMineralogyPolymerLower critical solution temperatureGibbs free energyInorganic Chemistrysymbols.namesakechemistry.chemical_compoundRheologyMaterials ChemistrysymbolsPolystyrenePhase diagramMacromolecules
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Vitrification of polymer solutions as a function of solvent quality, analyzed via vapor pressures.

2006

Vapor pressures (headspace sampling in combination with gas chromatography) and glass transition temperatures [differential scanning calorimetry (DSC)] have been measured for solutions of polystyrene (PS) in either toluene (TL) (10-70 degrees C) or cyclohexane (CH) (32-60 degrees C) from moderately concentrated solutions up to the pure polymer. As long as the mixtures are liquid, the vapor pressure of TL (good solvent) is considerably lower than that of CH (theta solvent) under other identical conditions. These differences vanish upon the vitrification of the solutions. For TL the isothermal liquid-solid transition induced by an increase of polymer concentration takes place within a finite …

chemistry.chemical_classificationCyclohexaneChemistryVapor pressureTheta solventAnalytical chemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyPolymerIsothermal processchemistry.chemical_compoundDifferential scanning calorimetryPolystyrenePhysical and Theoretical ChemistryGlass transitionThe Journal of chemical physics
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1984

Sedimentation coefficients of S of polystyrene covering a broad range of molecular weights M, are measured in toluene and 2-butanone in the semidilute regime. The results are compared with literature data using a plot of S · NA · η/(1 − νρ) = M · η/f versus concentration c, allowing experiments in different solvents of different density ρ and viscosity η to be compared (ν: partial specific volume of polymer; f: friction coefficient; NA: Avogadro number). According to scaling theory for concentrations higher than a critical concentration c, linear plots are to be expected. This is true for the theta-solvent cyclohexane, but for the theta-solvent cyclopentane as well as for the thermodynamica…

chemistry.chemical_classificationCyclohexanePolymerToluenechemistry.chemical_compoundsymbols.namesakeViscositychemistryPartial specific volumeAvogadro constantPolymer chemistrysymbolsPolystyreneCyclopentaneDie Makromolekulare Chemie
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