Abstract

Blends of polystyrene (PS) and poly(methylmethacrylate) (PMMA) have been investigated in elongation at 170 °C. The melts of the pure PS and PMMA have only a small difference in their viscosities. Consequently, with 8–12–16–20 weight % PS in PMMA, the elongational viscosities of the melts show only small differences and are similar to that of PMMA. However, when the maximum elongation of 3.5 Hencky units (corresponding to a stretch λ=33 and obtained at a strain rate of 0.1 s−1) is followed by recovery, the recoverable strain strongly depends on the PS concentration and shows very large values with a maximum that corresponds to a recoverable stretch of λR=14.5 (for the 20% PS blend). The morphology obtained by quenching the samples shows that the originally spherical PS droplets in the continuous PMMA are stretched into ellipsoids and finally into long needles. During recovery, the viscoelastic deformation (molecular orientation) recovers and the stretched needles change backwards into spheres. But these two procedures occur with different time scales. The driving force for the second procedure is the interfacial tension α. An analysis is given for the determination of α from the measured transient recovery. Conversely, the transient recovery can be predicted when α, the droplet size, and the equilibrium value λR are known. Resulting from the different blends the interfacial tension between the melts of PS and PMMA is between α=1.5 and 2.2 mN/m. This range covers previously published results for the same blends measured by a very different method, viz. shear oscillations.

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