Abstract

AbstractAbove the crystallization temperature slightly branched polyethylene and propane are miscible in all proportions above a critical pressure, defined as upper critical solution pressure (UCSP). This pressure decreases only very slightly from 110 to 150°C. At 110°C. the UCSP varies from 450 atm. for a polymer fraction of molecular weight 17,000, to 580 atm. for one of molecular weight 250,000. The critical polymer concentrations are low as in conventional polymer‐solvent systems and shift with molecular weight in a similar manner. The pressures required to achieve solubility of the polymer in the gas at polymer concentrations less than critical (dew‐point pressures) are nearly as high as the UCSP down to very low polymer concentrations. The data determine part of the critical locus in (P, T, composition) space. Experiments with other polyethylene‐n‐alkane systems (ethane, butane, and pentane) show that the critical locus changes gradually from a liquid‐liquid to a gas‐liquid boundary and might be termed a fluid‐liquid locus. If crystallization of polymer does not intervene, this locus intersects the saturated vapor pressure curve at a lower critical end point (LCEP) which is the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) found only recently by Freeman and Rowlinson in many hydrocarbon polymers with hydrocarbon solvents. Incomplete miscibility extends over greater regions of temperature and pressure as the solvent molecule becomes smaller, but the critical locus would probably be closed along the pressure axis for a hypothetical amorphous polymethylene with ethane.

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