Abstract
Microhardness is used to examine the microstructural changes of a series of polyethylene (PE) /polypropylene (PP) blends in a wide composition range. This study complements previous hardness results obtained on high-density/low-density polyethylene systems. The use of isotactic polypropylene, as a blend component allows investigation of a material in which the hardness of the amorphous phase, contrary to PE, differs from zero. The influence of treatments such as crystallization of the PP-phase in the presence of molten PE, within the blend, or annealing the PE phase, while leaving the PP component unmodified, are discussed with reference to the additivity hardness values of the single componentsH PE andH PP. It is shown that the coexistence of the PP and PE phases inhibits the crystallization capability of one phase and modifies the annealing behaviour of the other phase leading, as a result, to depressedH PP andH PE values. The observed deviations ofH blend, throughout the composition range, from the additivity law of single components are quantitatively justified in the light of crystallinity changes of the PP phase and in terms of the population of modified lamellae of the PE component.
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