Reversible melting of extended-chain and folded-chain polymer crystals

ORAL

Abstract

The reversibility of crystallization and melting of crystals of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and polyethylene (PE) of extended-chain and folded-chain morphology has been investigated by temperature-modulated differential scanning calorimetry (TMDSC). The total and average specific reversibility of folded-chain crystals is considerably larger than in the case of extended-chain crystals. This experimental observation can be attributed to a different number of points of possible decoupling between crystallized and amorphous sequences along individual, partially crystallized molecules within the globally semi-crystalline superstructure in extended-chain and folded-chain crystals. Due to incomplete melting of the macromolecules, the morphology of the folded-chain crystal allows molecular segments to reversibly melt and crystallize as a function of temperature. The extended-chain conformation, in turn, inhibits reversible melting due to the required molecular nucleation after complete melting of a single molecule. The experimental findings support both, the concepts of lateral-surface activity and molecular nucleation presented earlier.

*Supported by NSF, Polymers Program, DMR-0312233.

Authors

  • Rene Androsch

    • Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Material Science
  • Wunderlich Bernhard

    • Department of Chemistry, The University of Tennessee and Chemical Sciences Division, ORNL, Oak Ridge
    • University of Tennessee, Knoxville
  • Hans-Joachim Radusch

    • Martin-Luther-University Halle-Wittenberg, Institute of Material Science