Abstract

Abstract The dynamic viscoelastic property, creep and creep recovery behavior, and dielectric relaxation of long-chain branched Bisphenol A polycarbonates were measured in parallel plate rheometer and dielectric analyzer. The linear polycarbonate (PC-L) as reference and three branched polycarbonates (PC-Bs) have similar molecular weights and molecular weight distributions, while the PC-Bs have different branching degrees, below 0.7 branch points/chain and above twice of M c . The long-chain branched polycarbonates exhibit higher zero-shear viscosities, more significant shear shinning, higher flow activation energies, and much longer relaxation times. It was also found that long-chain branches increase the elasticity of melt characterized by the steady-state recoverable compliance and the storage modulus. The ‘dissident’ rheological behavior of long-chain branching exhibiting mainly in addition polymers such as polyolefin, is confirmed in condensation polymers. These behaviors resulted from additional molecular entanglements of long-chain branches can be understood qualitatively in terms of the tube model for topological constraints. The dielectric α-relaxation of linear polycarbonate and branched polycarbonates has been fitted with Vogel–Fulcher–Tammann–Hesse (VFTH) equation and the shape of relaxation time curves is also analyzed. The long-chain branched polycarbonates present longer relaxation times, but divergent α-relaxation temperatures, because the latter is dominated by the free volume.

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