Abstract

AbstractDepolarized small‐angle light scattering from spherulites in semicrystalline polymers gives rise to a characteristic cloverleaf pattern. For scattering from a single spherulite, the position of the maximum in scattered intensity is readily related to the spherulite radius. For a distribution of spherulites, the maximum should be related to some characteristic measure of the distribution. It is shown for a wide variety of distributions that this characteristic radius is a ratio of high moments of the size distribution, specifically R* ≈ 〈R7〉/〈R6〉. The shape of the light‐scattering profile should in principal be related to the nature of the spherulite distribution. Calculations of scattering profiles from a variety of distributions fail to demonstrate this, owing to the strong dependence of scattering power on spherulite size. Exceptions are noted for the case of certain bimodal distributions.

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