Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.92, No.6, 3454-3465, 2004
Morphology and properties of isotactic polypropylene modified with hydrocarbon resin MBG273. I. Binary blends
We investigated a system formed of isotactic polypropylene (iPP) and hydrogenated hydrocarbon resin MBG273 (up to 30 wt % resin) to study the influence of the composition on the morphology, structure, and properties of its blends and derived films. All the blends, after the mixing of the components in the melt and cooling at room temperature, were formed by a crystalline phase of iPP and by one homogeneous phase formed by amorphous iPP and the MBG273 resin. The presence of MBG273 did not influence the crystalline structure of iPP, which remained, for every blend, a-monoclinic, but it reduced the crystallization temperature and nucleation density of iPP. Differential scanning calorimetry and dynamic mechanical thermal analysis showed an increase in the glass-transition temperature with the resin content, confirming the formation of one amorphous phase. Tensile property analysis indicated an increase in Young's modulus and a decrease in the elongation at break of films as a function of the resin content in the blends. The water vapor permeability and tensile mechanical properties were related to an increase in the glass transition with the addition of MBG273. (C) 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.