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Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.41, No.19, 2342-2354, 2003
Changes in the melting behavior with the radial distance in isotactic polypropylene spherulites
The melting of highly tactic i-polypropylene occurs in two stages even for crystallization at 145degreesC, a temperature at which reorganization during scanning is negligible. A comparison of two such polypropylenes, one nucleated and the other not nucleated, together with fractions from the latter, has been made with electron microscopy following permanganic etching, in addition to differential scanning calorimetry. This has allowed the two melting stages to be assigned to two components of the lamellar morphology, with progressive changes in both occurring with increasing radial distance within a spherulite. The highest melting temperature is for dominant radial lamellae far from a spherulite center. The lowest melting regions are the evenly crosshatched spherulite centers and a narrow peripheral band. Lower melting is attributed to the suppression of isothermal lamellar thickening paralleling recent direct demonstrations in polyethylene. (C) 2003 Wiley Periodicals, lnc.