Abstract

AbstractThe oxygen‐barrier properties of amorphous polyethylene terephthalate‐based copolymers with various acid comonomers were examined. The incorporation of increasing amounts of isophthalate, phthalate, or naphthalate gradually reduced the permeability P toward the low values obtained for the corresponding homopolymers. The permeability of poly(ethylene 3,4′‐bibenzoate) homopolymer was only slightly lower than that of polyethylene terephthalate, and the copolymers correspondingly exhibited a very gradual decrease in P as the amount of 3,4′‐bibenzoate (3,4′BB) increased. In contrast, copolymerization with the linear isomer, 4,4′BB, produced a substantial increase in P. Generally, comonomer affected the solubility S less than the diffusivity D, and therefore changes in P reflected primarily changes in D for the polymers studied. The diffusivity and solubility depended on the copolymer composition in accordance with static and dynamic free‐volume concepts of gas permeability in glassy polymers. The solubility S correlated with the amount of free volume as determined by the glass‐transition temperature. Correlation of the diffusivity D with the magnitude of the subambient γ relaxation identified dynamic free volume with thermally activated conformational changes and segmental motions. Correspondence in the activation energy confirmed the relationship. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 39: 1889–1899, 2001

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