Abstract

Thermal shrinkage behaviour of oriented atactic polystyrene monofilaments, which show a brittle-to-ductile transition in the vicinity of Δn = −2 × 10 −3 (at a temperature of 20°C and a stretching rate of 100%/min), is investigated by thermomechanical analysis (t.m.a.). The maximum contraction ratio ΔL 1 L 0 at a constant rate of heating decreases linearly with increasing external tensile stress, and the limiting contraction ratio (at zero external load) has a broad maximum near the transition point. The time dependence of the isothermal contraction ratio [ΔL(∞) − ΔL(t)] ΔL(∞) is represented by an exponential function and an Arrhenius type temperature dependence is realized with an activation energy of several tens of kcal/mol. The degree of birefringence after isothermal shrinkage ( Δn(∞)) increases linearly with an increase in external tensile load. Degrees of birefringence before isothermal shrinkage ( Δn(0)) and Δn(∞) are related to each other almost linearly. The two-state model is effective in understanding these thermal shrinkage behaviours.

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