Abstract

AbstractThe rheological properties of a thermotropic polyester were determined in the nematic and isotropic states. In the isotropic state, the viscosity is almost constant and the polymer is only slightly elastic. The nematic phase has a lower viscosity than the isotropic, except at low frequencies or shear rates, where the viscosity increases as though the polymer had a yield stress. There is a marked dependence of the rheology on shear history. The effects of shearing can be erased by returning the material first to the isotropic state and then back to the nematic state. The results are discussed with reference to analogous observations in small‐molecule liquid crystals and in thermotropic aromatic co‐polyesters.

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