Abstract

AbstractWater absorbed by nylons appears to be partitioned into interlamellar and interfibrillar spaces. The amount of water in the interfibrillar region remains essentially unchanged with increasing draw ratio, whereas that in the interlamellar regions decreases with draw ratio; the latter accounts for the decrease in the water uptake in the drawn fibers. These results suggest that the amount of the amorphous material in the interfibrillar regions remains unchanged during drawing, and the increase in the crystallinity during drawing results from the incorporation of the amorphous chain segments in the interlamellar regions into the crystalline lamellae. Further, the interfibrillar water is more tightly bound than the interlamellar water. The length of the longitudinal channels into which water diffuses is about the same as that of the fibrils, and increases from ca. 1500 to 2000 Å upon drawing. The longitudinal channels are highly oriented even in undrawn fibers, and their misorientation increases from 5° to 15° upon drawing. These channels can be described as surface fractals of dimension 3.4–3.6. © 1994 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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