Abstract
AbstractBlends of poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO) and poly(vinyl acetate) (PVAc) show a unique value of the glass transition temperature, intermediate between that of plain polymers. The addition of PVAc to PEO causes a depression in both the spherulite growth rate (G) and the overall kinetic rate constant (Kn). Such depression is larger at higher undercooling and, at a given crystallization temperature, it increases with the content of PVAc. The experimental G and Kn data were analyzed by means of latest kinetic theories in order to determine the influence of composition on the process of surface secondary nucleation. The melt behaviour of PEO/PVAc blends cannot be explained only in terms of diluent effects due to the compatibility of the components in the melt. Especially, at lower undercooling it is likely that annealing and morphological effects must also be taken into account. The morphology of thin films of blends, isothermally crystallized from melt, suggests that an amorphous mixed phase (PEO + PVAc) is formed in interlamellar regions. It was found that plain PEO crystals grow according to a regime I process of surface secondary nucleation while in the case of blends the crystals of PEO grow via regime II mechanism.
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