Abstract

The macromorphology of isotactic/atactic (iPP/aPP) and isotactic/syndiotactic (iPP/sPP) polypropylene mixtures is examined by optical microscopy. The spherulitic macrostructure of equimolecular weight [weight-average molecular weight (Mw) = 200k] iPP/aPP blends is volume-filling to very high aPP concentrations when the crystallization temperature is 130 °C. Similar spherulitic macrostructures (spherulite size and volume-filling nature) are observed for iPP homopolymer and a 50/50 iPP/aPP blend at low crystallization temperatures (115–135 °C). At higher crystallization temperatures (140–145 °C), a equimolecular weight (Mw = 200k) 50/50 iPP/aPP blend exhibits nodular texture that blurs the spherulitic boundaries. Double temperature jump experiments show that the nodular texture is due to melt phase separation that develops prior to crystallization. The upper critical solution temperature (UCST) of a 50/50 iPP/aPP blend (Mw = 200k) lies below 155 °C, and the blend is miscible at conventional melt processing temperatures. The UCST behavior is controlled by the blend molecular weight and aPP microstructure. aPP microstructures containing increased isospecific sequencing (although still noncrystalline) exhibit a reduced tendency for phase separation in 50/50 mixtures (Mw = 200k) and the absence of nodular texture at low undercoolings (140–145 °C). Equimolecular weight (Mw = 200k) 50/50 iPP/sPP mixtures exhibit phase-separated texture at all crystallization temperatures. The size scale of the phase-separated texture decreases with decreasing crystallization temperature because of a competition between crystallization and phase separation from a melt initially well mixed from the initial solution blending process. Extended melt annealing experiments show that the 50/50 iPP/sPP mixture (Mw = 200k) is immiscible in the melt at conventional melt processing temperatures. The iPP/sPP pair shows a much stronger tendency for phase separation than the iPP/aPP polymer pair. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci B: Polym Phys 38: 1947–1964, 2000

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