Search results for "compatibilization"
showing 10 items of 59 documents
Reactive Compatibilization of PBT/EVA Blends with an Ethylene‐Acrylic Acid Copolymer and a Low Molar Mass Bis‐Oxazoline
2004
Poly(styrene-b-methyl methacrylate) block copolymers as compatibilizing agents in blends of poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) and poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-…
1993
Abstract The compatibilizing effect of the symmetric narrowly distributed block copolymer poly(styrene- b -methyl methacrylate) (P(S- b -MMA)) in blends of high-molecular-weight poly(styrene- co -acrylonitrile) containing 20 wt% (PSAN20) or 43 wt% acrylonitrile (PSAN43) with poly(2,6-dimethyl-1,4-phenylene ether) (PPE) was investigated by dynamic mechanical spectroscopy and transmission electron microscopy. In blends with the PSAN43, P(S- b -MMA) forms spherical micelles in the PPE phase with no dispersing efficiency. In contrast to this, for blends with PSAN20, the block copolymer is located at the phase boundary, causing an extremely fine dispersion of the components. Depending on the loc…
Reactive compatibilization of PA6/LDPE blends with an ethylene–acrylic acid copolymer and a low molar mass bis-oxazoline
2003
Abstract A sample of polyamide-6 (PA) was blended with low density polyethylene (LDPE) in the 80/20 wt/wt ratio, either without and with 2 phr of an ethylene–acrylic acid copolymer (EAA), Which was known to behave as a compatibilizer precursor, and the effect of the addition of small amounts (0.2 or 0.35 phr) of a fourth component, 2,2′-(1,3-phenylene)-bis(2-oxazoline) (PBO), was investigated. The reactions of PBO with EAA, PA and their blends were studied by recording as a function of time the torque applied to the blending apparatuses and by studying the solubility behavior of the products in formic acid. The PALDPE blends were prepared in a co-rotating twin screw extruder and were charac…
Inducing mixing of water-in water BSA/dextran emulsion by a strong polyelectrolyte
2015
Abstract We examine whether a small amount of strong polyelectrolyte (dextran sulfate sodium salt/DSS/) can induce mixing in water-in-water bovine serum albumin/dextran (BSA/DEX) emulsion and how intermacromolecular interactions affect its the rheological properties. Addition of DSS to water-in-water emulsion at pH 5.4 leads to its mixing at the DSS/BSA weight ratio, ( q ( DSS / BSA ) ) ≥ 0.07 , a noticeable increase in viscosity and storage modulus (G′). Mixing is reversible: increasing the ionic strength leads to phase separation in the water/BSA/DEX/DSS system. The increase in viscoelasticity results from the interaction of DSS with both macromolecular compounds of the emulsion. We assum…
Degradation of polymer blends: A brief review
2017
Abstract The usefulness of any material, including polymer blends, depends on its degradability and durability. The blend composition can significantly affect the degradative behavior of a polymer blend and can differ from the degradation routes of the pure components since the interactions among different species in the blends during degradation, and among the degradation products, can occur. These reactions can lead either to an acceleration of the degradation rate or to a stabilizing effect in comparison with the pure components. Thus, the additive rule cannot be often applied in case of degradation of polymer blends and, therefore, it is difficult to predict the degradative behavior of …
Interfaces in polymer blends
2000
We investigate the structure and thermodynamics of interfaces in dense polymer blends using Monte Carlo (MC) simulations and self-consistent field (SCF) calculations. For structurally symmetric blends we find quantitative agreement between the MC simulations and the SCF calculations for excess quantities of the interface (e.g., interfacial tension or enrichment of copolymers at the interface). However, a quantitative comparison between profiles across the interface in the MC simulations and the SCF calculations has to take due account of capillary waves. While the profiles in the SCF calculations correspond to intrinsic profiles of a perfectly flat interface the local interfacial position f…
Effects of Organoclay on Morphology and Properties of Nanocomposites Based on LDPE/PA6 Blends without and with SEBS-g-MA
2009
LDPE/PA-6 blends (75/25 wt/wt) were added with SEBS-g-MA (S) and/or an organoclay (20A) using different compounding sequences and the morphology and the properties of the blends or composites were investigated. An XRD study of the nanocomposites with pure polymers showed that 20A is intercalated by LDPE or PA-6 chains, whereas it is exfoliated by S if the clay concentration does not exceed 10 wt%. The SEM investigation showed that both S and 20A behave as efficient emulsifying agents for the LDPE/PA-6 blends. However, their effect on the mechanical properties was found to be opposite: S enhanced toughness but lowered the stiffness, whereas 20A improved the elastic modulus but impaired the i…
Physical and structural characterization of blends made with polyamide 6 and gamma-irradiated polyethylenes
1996
Abstract Morphological, calorimetric and rheological results of blends made with polyamide 6 and polyethylene gamma irradiated in air are presented. The polar oxidized groups grafted in the poliolefin chains through gamma-radiation induce “compatibilization” effects in the blends with a more uniform and finer distribution of the polyethylene “phase” in the polyamide matrix, with respect to blends made with the unirradiated polymer. This effect, observed with polyethylenes of different molecular structure, i.e. low density, linear low density and high density, was attributed to the presence of interactions among the functional oxidized groups of the polyethylene chains and the polyamide. Tes…
Orientation induced brittle – Ductile transition in a polyethylene/polyamide 6 blend
2014
Abstract Polyamide/polyolefin blends are of scientific and technological interest but, on the other hand, the different chemical nature of the two components makes them incompatible, resulting in unsatisfactory physical properties and making compatibilization necessary. In particular, although the two components are ductile, the binary blends can show brittle behaviour. It is also known that the effect of the elongational flow (and then of the induced orientation) on polymer blends is a decrease of elongation at break with increase of the degree of orientation. In this work, the effect of orientation on the mechanical properties of a low density polyethylene/polyamide 6 incompatible blend w…
An investigation of the compatibilization of blends of polyethylene and a semirigid liquid crystalline polymer
1996
The mechanical properties of blends with liquid crystalline polymers are in general poor and lower than those expected on the basis of additivity rule because of the strong incompatibility between the flexible and rigid components. Compatibilization is then necessary to enhance the adhesion between the two phases and then to improve the final properties of these blends. The addition of maleic anhydride functionalized polymers could give rise to some compatibilization because of possible reactions between the maleic anhydride group and the end groups of the liquid crystalline polymers. These reactions do not seem to occur in blends of polyethylene and a semirigid liquid crystalline polymer. …