Abstract

Minor (<1%) macromolecular constituents may significantly affect physical/utility properties of the multicomponent polymer systems. Separation and molecular characterization of the small amounts of macromolecular additives from the dominant polymer matrices represents an exacting analytical problem. Recently a series of unconventional liquid chromatographic methods was developed for separation of the constituents of polymer blends; their generic name is Liquid chromatography under limiting conditions of enthalpic interactions, LC LC. The LC LC procedures employ the difference in elution rate of the low molecular substances and the macromolecules within the column packed with porous particles. Small molecules permeate practically all pores of the packing and therefore they elute slowly. Polymer species are partially of fully pore excluded and in absence of enthalpic interactions they are rapidly transported along the column. The appropriately chosen low molecular substances promote interactions of macromolecules within the column. If eluted in front of sample, the interaction promoting low molecular substance may create a sort of slowly eluting barrier that is “impermeable” for the interacting macromolecules and efficiently decelerates their fast transport. The blocking action of a barrier differs for macromolecules of distinct nature, which elute from the column with a different rate to be mutually separated irrespectively of their molar mass. In present work, different approaches to the LC LC separations are compared from the point of view of their applicability to complex polymer systems, in which one constituent is present at very low concentration, and also in light of sample recovery. The practical examples are the two- and three-component polymer blends of polystyrenes, poly(methyl methacrylate)s and poly(vinyl acetate)s of different molar mass averages and distributions, as well as the diblock copolymers polystyrene-block-poly(methyl methacrylate) that contain their parent homopolymers.

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