Abstract
AbstractThe theory of interdiffusion of a pair of components in multicomponent polymer mixtures is reviewed from a statistical point of view, and the foundation of the “fast” and “slow” mode theories, as well as the more recent “ANK” theory of interdiffusion is critically examined. The ANK theory reproduces the results of the slow and fast mode theories as the two limits when the vacancy concentration is varied from zero to a large value, and shows that the interdiffusion coefficient in a binary compressible mixture at finite vacancy concentrations can not in general be expressed only in terms of the tracer diffusion coefficients of the components, but it involves in addition the cooperative diffusion coefficient which characterizes the relaxation of total density fluctuations. The predictions of the ANK expression for the molecular dependence of the kinetic factor is compared with recent scattering experiments.
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