Abstract

The rapid consumption of fossil resources and its adverse impact on the environment require the use of bio-based materials to replace petrochemical products. In this study, we present a bio-based, heat-resistant engineering plastic, poly(pentamethylene terephthalamide) (nylon 5T). To address the issues of the narrow processing window and difficulty in melting processing of nylon 5T, we introduced more flexible decamethylene terephthalamide (10T) units to create a copolymer, nylon 5T/10T. The chemical structure was confirmed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) and nuclear magnetic resonance (13C-NMR). We investigated the influence of 10T units on the thermal performance, crystallization kinetics, crystallization activation energy, and crystal structures of the copolymers. Our results demonstrate that the crystal growth mode of nylon 5T is a two-dimensional discoid growth pattern, while nylon 5T/10T exhibits a two-dimensional discoid or three-dimensional spherical growth pattern. The melting temperature, crystallization temperature, and crystallization rate first decrease and then increase, and crystal activation energy first increases and then decreases as a function of 10T units. These effects are attributed to the combined impact of molecular chain structure and polymer crystalline region. Bio-based nylon 5T/10T shows excellent heat resistance (melting temperature > 280 °C) and a wider processing window than nylon 5T and 10T, which is a promising heat-resistant engineering plastic.

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