Abstract

Linear viscoelasticity and tracer diffusion were investigated as functions of temperature, component molecular weight and blend composition for entangled, single-phase blends of nearly monodisperse poly(ethylene-alt-propylene) (PEP) and head-to-head polypropylene (HHPP). Both components are non-polar and, despite evidence for slight differences of component glass temperatures in their blends, the viscoelastic data obey time-temperature superposition rather well. The properties of the blends were compared at constant T-T g (blend) with predictions of the tube-model theories. The composition dependence of viscosity agrees best with the double-reptation prediction, as had been found earlier for molecular weight blends. The variation in plateau modulus with composition is consistent with reptation, but the changes are too small to provide a definitive test. The tracer diffusion coefficients, D*PEP and D*HHPP are nearly independent of composition, consistent with the reptation prediction and in sharp contrast with tracer diffusion for blends with specific associations. Results for the recoverable compliance depart from this pattern, varying differently and much less strongly with composition than the predictions of either single or double reptation. It thus seems that microstructural blends may behave in significantly more complex ways than molecular weight blends even for components with only weak dispersive interactions and rather modest differences in glass temperature and plateau modulus.

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