Abstract

A complicated thermochromic phase transition (PT) of order—disorder type in poly(di-n-decylsilane) has been studied in detail by variable-temperature UV and Raman spectroscopy. Not less than five polymer modifications were shown to participate in this PT. Above the equilibrium PT temperature Tc (∼60 °C), the polymer exists as a hexagonal columnar mesophase (HCM) with a disordered silicon backbone and disordered side chains. PT proceeds not abruptly but over a temperature range 60—5 °C and does not reach completion, being stopped by glassification. At room temperature, a coexistence in the polymer of HCM and a few crystalline phases with ordered backbone is observed. The latter are separated in space, what was evidenced by Raman micromapping of a polymer film. The temperature intervals of existence of different ordered phases also do not coincide, this enables one to identify in the UV and Raman spectra the components, corresponding to the modifications possessing trans (anti) and, supposedly, AD+AD– main chain conformations. As the relaxation processes in this comb-like polymer occur slowly, the quantitative ratio of different phases is not a single-valued function of temperature but depends on the thermal prehistory of the sample. Ordering of long side chains on cooling was demonstrated by the Raman method.

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