Abstract

AbstractWe suggest a universal plot that superposes linear viscoelastic data of nearly monodisperse polymers on a single curve, regardless of the molecular weight, temperature, and species of polymers. The plotting method is based on the time–temperature superposition and rescaling of viscoelastic functions with terminal behavior. Without any information from molecular theories, the plot supports the fact that the molecular theories of the linear viscoelasticity of monodisperse polymers are independent of the species of polymers. Although an appropriate scaling may show universality by separately extracting the reptational mode and the Rouse mode from the whole set of viscoelastic data, our plotting method shows universality in a unified manner that scales the viscoelastic functions measured over the whole frequency range. We explain the origin of the universality of the plot in terms of molecular theory, the phenomenological spectra of the relaxation time (the BSW and CW spectra), and the principle of time–temperature superposition. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 42: 2730–2737, 2004

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