Abstract

AbstractPoly‐3‐hydroxy butyrate has been etched and studied under scanning and transmission electron microscopes. It displays three of the following unusual features: (1) spherulites develop in a loose spiral rather than radial structure, which appears to reflect the chiral nature of the polymer; (2) in the banded spherulitic structure, lamellae oriented flat‐on to the surface are etched more deeply in relation to edge‐on lamellae; and (3) material crystallized at high temperature is less resistant to etching than that crystallized at low temperature, whereas the most rapid rate of etching appears to be where growth occurred at an intermediate temperature where the growth rate was at its maximum. The second and third phenomena are contrary to what is found in polymers such as polyethylene and polyethylene terephthalate and are attributed to excess free volume in the material located between the main lamellar bundles. Polyoxymethylene also displays the same unusual relationship of etching rate with crystallization temperature. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 40: 124–133, 2002

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