화학공학소재연구정보센터
Macromolecules, Vol.53, No.1, 445-457, 2020
Effect of Tacticity on the Phase Behavior and Demixing of P alpha MSAN/dPMMA Blends Investigated by SANS
We investigate the effect of polymer tacticity on the phase behavior and phase separation of polymer mixtures by small-angle neutron scattering (SANS). Poly(a-methyl styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (PaMSAN) and deuterated poly(methyl methacrylate) (dPMMA) with two degrees of syndiotacticity were selected as a model partially miscible blend, as one of the most highly interacting systems known (defined by the temperature dependence of the blend's interaction parameter). One-phase (equilibrium) and time-resolved, spinodal demixing experiments were analyzed by de Gennes' random phase approximation (RPA) and Cahn-Hilliard-Cook (CHC) theory, respectively. The second derivative of the Gibbs free energy of mixing with respect to composition (G '' = partial derivative(2)Delta G(m)/partial derivative phi(2)) and corresponding chi parameter were obtained from both RPA and CHC analysis and found to correlate well across the phase boundary. We find that blends with higher PMMA syndiotacticity exhibit greater miscibility and a steeper G '' temperature dependence by similar to 40%. The segment length of dPMMA with higher syndiotacticity was found to be a = 7.4 angstrom, slightly larger than 6.9 angstrom reported for lower syndiotacticity dPMMA. Consideration of thermal fluctuations is required for the self-consistent analysis of the nontrivial evolution of the spinodal peak position q* over time, corroborated by CHC model calculations. The temperature dependence of the mobility parameter, M, can be described by a "fast-mode" average of the diffusion coefficients of the blend constituents, except for quenches originating near the glass transition. A minimum demixing length scale of A approximate to 40 nm is obtained, in agreement with the theory for deeper quenches, but deviates at shallower quenches, whose origin we discuss. CHC correctly describes demixing length and time scales, except for quenches into the vicinity of the spinodal boundary. Our data demonstrate the significant effect of relatively minor polymer microstructure variations on polymer blend behavior across both sides of the phase boundary.