Abstract

AbstractBlends of poly(ethylene oxide) with a poly(ether sulfone) were prepared by casting from a common solvent and were found to be miscible and show a single, composition dependent, glass transition temperature. Mixtures in both cyclohexanone and N,N‐dimethylformamide phase, separated on heating and thus conditions need to be carefully chosen to obtain homogeneous blends. At higher PEO contents, PEO crystallised from the blends at lower temperatures. The melting point depression, as determined by trubidity measurements, was used to calculate an interaction parameter which was negative, as expected for miscible polymers. The blends also phase separated on heating, and the cloud point curve could be measured by turbidity measurements and confirmed by both visible and electron microscopy. The cloud point curve was very skew with a minimum at around 10 wt.‐% PES content. This was not a strong function of the molecular weight and the skew nature was thus presumably due to differences in the state parameters of the pure components. The blends showed a very high mobility with sharp and reproducible could points which might make them ideal for future miscibility studies.

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