Abstract
The effect of mixing time on the morphology, with the viscosity ratio and composition as parameters in the mixing process, was studied for two immiscible binary polyblend systems, polyamide/polyethersulfone (PA/PES) and poly(butylene terephthalate)/polystyrene (PBT/PS), by selective dissolution followed by macroscopic and microscopic observations. At a short mixing time, the morphology of each phase depends not only on the composition, but also on the viscosity difference of two phases, shown by the results of PA/PES blends with a viscosity ratio of 0.03. The lower viscous phase (PA) forms particles, fibrils, and layers successively with its increasing content and becomes a continuous one at low concentrations as the minor phase, while the high viscous phase (PES) appears mainly in the form of particles and directly becomes a continuous one at high concentrations. With increasing mixing time, the effect of the viscosity ratio becomes less and the morphology is determined mainly by the volume fraction of each phase. Particles are the final morphology of the minor phase. Only at a viscosity ratio of unity is the morphological development of two phases (PBT and PS) with mixing time the same, and any one of these two components is in the form of particles when it is the minor phase. At the composition near 50/50, fibrillar or continuous structure may coexist for both phases. The composition range of co-phase continuity is decided not only by the viscosity ratio but also by the mixing time. With increasing mixing time, this range becomes narrower and finally occurs at volume fraction of 50/50, no longer affected by the viscosity ratio. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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