Abstract

A significant correlation has been shown to exist between the interfacial tension of polymer pairs and their acid-base pair interaction. The relationship is inverse, with interfacial tensions decreasing as acid-base interactions increase. Interfacial tensions, frequently used as an indicator of polymer compatibility, were measured by the breaking thread method at temperatures in the vicinity of 200 °C. Acid-base pair interaction values were measured by inverse gas chromatography over wide temperature ranges. The observed correlation confirms the important contribution made by short-range, acid-base interactions to the observed value of interfacial tension and supports the prediction of equations based on fundamental definitions of surface forces. A collateral finding of this work is the decrease of acid-base functionality with rising temperature for all polymers studied. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 38: 2096–2104, 2000

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