Search results for "VISCOSITY"

showing 10 items of 542 documents

Gamma-radiation ageing of a low density polyethylene. Effects of irradiation temperature and dose rate

1993

Abstract Ageing due to gamma radiation of a low density polyethylene at various dose rates and temperatures is studied; the effect of thermal treatment only is also considered. The modifications induced in the molecular and crystallinity behaviour of the polymer are investigated by means of gel extraction, measurements of intrinsic viscosity and thermal analysis. Results indicate the occurrence of both crosslinking and oxidative degradation; the extent of the latter increases on decreasing the irradiation dose rate and on increasing the irradiation temperature. Some exceptions are found because of the increase in the mobility of free radicals at high temperature. These effects modify also t…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPolymers and PlasticsIntrinsic viscosityOrganic ChemistryGeneral Physics and AstronomyMineralogyPolymerThermal treatmentCrystallinityLow-density polyethylenechemistryChemical engineeringAgeingMaterials ChemistryIrradiationThermal analysisEuropean Polymer Journal
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1996

Developing an artificial oxygen carrier for use in humans, we polymerize native haemoglobin and myoglobin, using bifunctional, amino group specific cross-linkers, to soluble, so-called hyperpolymers. These polymers, like other polymerized globular proteins, are members of a new class of macromolecues which consist of macromolecular base units. They all have, due to the mechanisms of the chemical reaction, broad distributions of molecular weights. Fractions of hyperpolymers of human haemoglobin were obtained by employing preparative gel-permeation (size-exclusion) chromatography. The calibration curve of analytical gel-permeation chromatography (GPC) for haemoglobin hyperpolymers was determi…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPolymers and PlasticsMolecular massGlobular proteinCalibration curveIntrinsic viscosityOrganic ChemistryPolymerCondensed Matter Physicschemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryMyoglobinPolymerizationPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryMacromoleculeMacromolecular Chemistry and Physics
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On the viscosity of moderately concentrated solutions of poly(ether imide) in a mixed solvent of marginal quality

2000

Abstract Viscosities η were measured for moderately concentrated (15.5 wt%) solutions of poly(ether imide) (PEI) as a function of the composition of the cosolvent tetrahydrofuran (THF) plus γ-butyrolactone (γ-BL). The solutions are almost by a factor of four less viscous when THF predominates than when γ-BL is the major component of the solvent mixture. Furthermore, the viscosity passes a minimum as the composition of the mixed solvent is varied. Both observations can be well understood in terms of the viscosities of the mixed solvents and the hydrodynamic interaction between the polymer molecules. The pronounced dissymmetry of η as a function of the composition of the mixed solvent η resul…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPolymers and PlasticsOrganic ChemistryEtherPolymerSolventchemistry.chemical_compoundViscositychemistryPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryPhysical chemistryMoleculeSolvent effectsImideTetrahydrofuranPolymer
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Aqueous Laponite Clay Dispersions in the Presence of Poly(ethylene oxide) or Poly(propylene oxide) Oligomers and their Triblock Copolymers

2008

The effect of polyethylene oxide (PEO) or polypropylene oxide (PPO) oligomers of various molecular weight (Mw) as well as of triblock copolymers, based on PEO and PPO blocks, on aqueous laponite RD suspensions was studied with small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). The radius of gyration (RG) increases for low Mw whereas the opposite occurs for larger Mw. This behavior is explained on the-basis that an effective RG is given by two contributions: (1) the size of the particles coated with the polymer and (2) the interactions between the laponite RD particles which are attractive for small and repulsive for large polymers. The SANS curves in the whole Q-range are well described by a model of n…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPolypropylenePoly(propylene oxide)Materials scienceAqueous solutiontechnology industry and agricultureOxidemacromolecular substancesPolymerSurfaces Coatings and Filmschemistry.chemical_compoundViscositychemistryPolymer chemistryMaterials ChemistryCopolymerLaponite gels polymer SANS viscosityPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryPoly ethylene
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1991

A new rotational viscometer is presented which can be operated up to 2 000 bar and a maximum shear stress of 420 Pa. It allows, for the first time, to investigate the non-Newtonian flow behaviour of moderately concentrated polymer solutions. Results of measurements with two representatives of the system 2-propanol/poly(butyl methacrylate) with weight-average molecular weights Mw = 520 000 and Mw = 2 050 000, and ratios of weight- to number-average molecular weights Mw/Mn = 1,08 and Mw/Mw = 1,23, resp. in the region of moderate polymer concentrations are reported. For a ca. 7 wt.-% solution of the higher-molecular-weight polymer one obtains viscometric relaxation times τ0 varying from 1 to 1…

chemistry.chemical_classificationPropanolShear (sheet metal)Viscositychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryRelaxation (NMR)Polymer chemistryShear stressViscometerPolymerBar (unit)Die Makromolekulare Chemie
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Mean square radius of gyration and hydrodynamic radius of jointed star (dumbbell) and H-comb polymers

1996

Equations for the mean square radius of gyration and the hydrodynamic radius for jointed stars (dumbbells) and H-combs are derived, based on random flight statistics for each subchain. Comparision with literature data on computer simulations and experimental data for H-combs show good agreement for the g-value of the mean square radius of gyration even in good solvents. This suggests that for the mean square radius of gyration the relative dimension of a H-comb relative to the linear molecule of the same degree of polymerization is not altered significantly by long range interactions, as in the case of star polymers. For the hydrodynamic radius the situation is different. Fair agreement is …

chemistry.chemical_classificationQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesHydrodynamic radiusPolymers and Plasticsbusiness.industryChemistryOrganic ChemistryLinear molecular geometryPolymerDegree of polymerizationCondensed Matter PhysicsRelative dimensionMolecular physicsCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterInorganic ChemistryViscosityOpticsMaterials ChemistryRadius of gyrationDumbbellbusinessMacromolecular Theory and Simulations
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Polyelectrolytes Revisited: Reliable Determination of Intrinsic Viscosities

2007

The linear extrapolation of (hh0)/(h0c) towards c !0 constitutes the basis of traditional methods to determine intrinsic viscosities (h), where h is the viscosity of polymer solutions of concentration c and h0 is the viscosity of the pure solvent. With uncharged macromolecules this procedure works well; for polyelectrolytes it fails because of the pronounced non-linearity of the above dependence at high dilution resulting from the increasing electrostatic inter- actions. This contribution presents a new method for the determination of (h). It rests upon the application of the laws of phenomenological thermodynamics to the viscosity of polymer solutions and introduces a generalized intrinsic…

chemistry.chemical_classificationQuantitative Biology::BiomoleculesPolymers and PlasticsIntrinsic viscosityRelative viscosityOrganic ChemistryInherent viscosityExtrapolationThermodynamicsPolymerPolyelectrolyteDilutionCondensed Matter::Soft Condensed MatterViscositychemistryMaterials ChemistryOrganic chemistryMacromolecular Rapid Communications
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1985

Viscosity measurements were carried out as a function of pressure and temperature with solutions of 8 wt.-% PVC (Mw ≈ 75 000) in ten thermodynamically good solvents by means of a Searle-type viscometer. A rollingxyhball viscometer was used for the investigation of the pure solvents. In all cases the viscosity increases in a more or less exponential manner when the pressure is raised. The viscosity ratio f1000 = η1000 bar/η1bar can be varied by the choice of the solvent from ca. 2 (tetrahydrofuran) to 3,0 (cyclohexanone) at 40°C. For a constant temperature of 40°C, the volumes of activation for the viscous flow of the solutions, V≠, or f1000 exceed that of the pure solvent, by typically 25%.…

chemistry.chemical_classificationRelative viscosityViscometerCyclohexanoneThermodynamicsPolymerSolventViscositychemistry.chemical_compoundchemistryPolymer chemistryOrganic chemistryTetrahydrofuranBar (unit)Die Makromolekulare Chemie
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1986

The variation of the Huggins coefficient KH with the relative molecular mass M of the polymers was measured for solutions of polystyrene and of polyisobutylene and found to be most pronounced in the case of thermodynamically good solvents but vanishing at the theta-temperature, where the individual curves kH (T; M) intersect with each other. The experimental results are interpreted as a consequence of the rheological inequality of inter- and intra-molecular contacts between polymer segments. A model is presented according to which kH should be a linear function of M−(a−0,5), where a is the exponent of the intrinsic viscosity-relative molecular mass relationship (Kuhn-Mark-Houwink). The eval…

chemistry.chemical_classificationSolventViscositychemistry.chemical_compoundLinear function (calculus)chemistryVirial coefficientRheologyPolymer chemistryExponentThermodynamicsPolymerPolystyreneDie Makromolekulare Chemie
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Interrelation between the thermodynamic and viscometric behaviour of aqueous solutions of hydrophobically modified ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose

2000

Abstract Aqueous solutions of a commercial sample of hydrophobically modified ethyl hydroxyethyl cellulose (HC, Mw=100 kg/mol, nonylphenol substitution ca. 1.7 mol%) were studied with respect to their demixing behaviour and flow characteristics. Phase separation temperatures were measured turbidimetrically and by determining the first discernible macroscopic phase separation. In some cases demixing was also monitored viscometrically. Phase volume ratios yielded a critical polymer concentration of 1.87 wt.% HC (displaced considerably out of the minimum of the demixing curve towards higher polymer concentrations) and a lower critical solution temperature of 47°C. Model calculations of the spi…

chemistry.chemical_classificationSpinodalAqueous solutionChromatographyShear thinningPolymers and PlasticsOrganic ChemistryThermodynamicsPolymerEntropy of mixingLower critical solution temperatureDilutionViscositychemistryMaterials ChemistryPolymer
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