Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.33, No.17, 2331-2341, 1995
Small-Angle X-Ray-Scattering Study of Liquid-Crystalline Polycarbonates Based on Alpha-Methyl Stilbene Mesogen and Methylene-Containing Flexible Spacer
Crystallization and melting behavior are studied by small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS) for a series of recently synthesized monotropic liquid crystalline polycarbonates based on alpha-methyl stilbene mesogen and methylene flexible spacer. The one-dimensional electron density correlation function is used to obtain long period, crystal thickness, and linear crystallinity from the Lorentz-corrected SAXS intensity. Changes in these parameters during nonisothermal crystallization and melting are explained by a model of dual crystal populations. The primary crystals form first using the liquid crystalline phase as crystal nuclei, while smaller and less perfect crystals form later from the isotropic phase at low temperature. The results of the real-time SAXS study of isothermal crystallization also support the view that : the nematic phase serves as crystal nuclei for fast crystallization. An odd-even effect in crystal thickness and linear crystallinity is observed in all the SAXS experiments mentioned above. The results of this study and our complementary wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS) investigation show clearly that the difference in the position of the neighboring carbonate dipoles on a chain affects structural organization both at the unit cell level and at the level of the crystal in these monotropic LCPs.
Keywords:ETHER KETONE) CRYSTALLIZATION;CONFORMATIONAL ISOMERISM;MAIN-CHAIN;THERMOTROPIC POLYETHERS;PHASE-TRANSITIONS;MELTING BEHAVIOR;THERMAL HISTORY;ODD NUMBER;1-(4-HYDROXYPHENYL)-2-(2-METHYL-4-HYDROXYPHENYL)ETHANE;POLYMERS