Abstract

The dynamic rheological behavior, application of time-temperature superposition (TTS) and the failure mechanism of TTS are studied for the poly(vinyl chloride) (PVC)/trioctyl trimellitate (TOTM) (100/70) system. The Arrhenius equation, Williams–Landel—Ferry (WLF) equation, mathematical non-linear fitting and manual shift are applied to TTS fitting. For the PVC/TOTM (100/70) system, none of those methods can give well-superimposed master curves with either single horizontal shift or two-dimensional (horizontal and vertical) shift. The failure reason is attributed to the thermorheological complexity of the PVC/TOTM (100/70) system. Curves of the storage modulus versus the frequency can be well fitted with an empirical equation (G′=G′0+Kω n ) usually used to describe filled polymer systems, indicating the multilevel flowing unit characteristic in this system. With the increase of test temperature, the structure of the PVC/TOTM (100/70) system changes and an apparent transition appears in the rheological behavior. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) results reveal that for the PVC/TOTM (100/70) system there are microcrystallites present below 220°C, but above the rheological transition temperature (190°C) the bulk of the microcrystallites melted, which corresponds to the appearance of viscous flow participating in the rheological behavior. It verifies the fact that the gel networks crosslinked by microcrystallites dominate the rheological behavior below the transition temperature in the PVC/TOTM (100/70) system. The quantity of microcrystallites remaining in the melt determines the perfection of the physical gel networks. With the increase of test temperature, the microcrystallites melted gradually and the gel networks are broken up.

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