Abstract

AbstractIn‐depth interpretation of ring‐banded spherulitic morphology, crystals, polymorphism, and complex melting behavior in poly(1,4‐butylene adipate) (PBA) were analyzed via a procedure of designing composite core‐shell spherulites, in which two lamellar patterns (ring‐band vs. ringless) were packed by subjecting to crystallization at two‐step temperature schemes with specific temperatures and times. By heating to 52 °C and holding at that temperature for 30 min annealing, the core can be stripped off by melting, and analysis specifically on the ring‐shell portion (with the ringless core stripped by controlled melting) proves that the highest melting peak (P4 at 55–57 °C) is likely associated with melting of the ring‐band lamellae. Furthermore, the unusually complex multiple melting in PBA can be attributed to all three widely proposed mechanisms: (1) multiple types of lamellae preexisting in crystallized PBA, (2) scan/heating induced remelting/reorganization, and (3) polymorphism of dual crystal cells. In addition, this study evidently shows that the extinction rings within the ring‐banded shell, regardless of alternate edge‐on and flat‐on mechanism or alternative origins, can be of all singly α‐crystal form, either initially or upon postheating temperature‐induced transformation. Thus, the type of crystal forms (α or β) in polymorphic PBA is mainly associated with temperature of crystallization (Tc = 28 or 35 °C), and not likely with lamellar orientation (flat‐on or edge‐on). © 2008 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 46: 892–899, 2008

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