Abstract
Expressions for the mean square separation of chain ends and modifications of the formula for an ideal coil are discussed. On the basis of these and of the hydrodynamic theory of intrinsic viscosity, an interpretation of the modified Staudinger rule is offered. It relates the exponent a of the molecular weight to a flexibility parameter p of the chain in a given solvent, varying between zero and one (Eq. (4), (5)). Recent data on polystyrene and on cellulose nitrate are analyzed in greater detail. By means of the frictional ratio f/f0, the sedimentation constant s and the diffusion constant D, respectively, are connected with the degree of polymerization in terms of p (Eq. (9)). The limiting dependence of sedimentation and diffusion rate upon molecular weight for a straight chain and an ideal coil is also found in this manner. A comparison shows satisfactory agreement between values for p found from intrinsic viscosity and those determined from sedimentation or diffusion rates, for certain cellulose esters and starch derivatives. Effects of solvent and of inhomogeneity in respect to molecular weight are discussed briefly.
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