Concentration-superposition meets the challenge of validating very large rings
ORAL · Invited
Abstract
Valuable properties of linear polymers emerge when their molecular weight is several times their entanglement molecular weight, Me,lin, providing a strong impetus to examine cyclic polymers that have Mw / Me,lin ≡ Zw >> 1. This regime has proven difficult to reach. Some molecular structures enable preparation of pure rings, but have a highest accessible Zw < 15. Synthesis strategies that produce rings of Zw >> 15 confront the difficulty of proving that there are <1% linear chain contaminants. This talk deals with such a case: putative rings produced by Reversible Radical Recombination Polymerization (R3P) up to Zw = 300·Me,lin. We use dilution to increase Me(φ) without modifying topology. Using samples that have Zw = 301 and 219 in the melt, we present results for solutions of 2.5% and 1% that have Zw < 15 and show their accord with highly purified rings. Examining concentrations from 5% to 50% reveal unanticipated, qualitative changes in the relaxation dynamics as Zw increases from 30 to 300—a previously unexplored regime for cyclic polymers.
*This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Basic Energy Sciences under Award #DE-SC0018891, DE-SC0018657 and DE-SC0018655.
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Publication: Linear viscoelastic properties of a class of putative cyclic polymers synthesized by reversible radical recombination redox polymerization(R3P)", Dongjie Chen, Kristof Molnar, Hojin Kim, Carin Helfer, Gabor Kaszas, Judit Puskas, Julia Kornfield, Gregory McKenna, submitted.
Presenters
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Julie A Kornfield
- Caltech
- California Institute of Technology
- Cal Tech