Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.42, No.7, 1275-1288, 2004
Evidence for coupling and decoupling of parts of macromolecules by temperature-modulated calorimetry
Equilibrium crystals of linear macromolecules have an extended-chain macroconformation. They can melt at the equilibrium melting temperature, whereas crystallization needs considerable supercooling, even in the presence of crystal nuclei, making the overall phase transition irreversible. The same molecules with a metastable, chain-folded macroconformation may have a large amount of specific reversibility, that is, a fraction of the same polymer molecule that melts irreversibly may also show decoupled, reversible melting. The overall metastable, nanophase structure of such semicrystalline polymers may thus support local equilibria. The tool for the quantitative analysis is quasi-isothermal temperature-modulated calorimetry that can separate reversible from irreversible processes. A major review of the study of crystals of more than 20 polymers has been published. On the basis of this extensive body of information, a first discussion of decoupling of parts of macromolecules is attempted and linked to previous studies of phase equilibria. (C) 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.
Keywords:temperature-modulated differential scanning calorimetry (TMDSC);melt;crystallization;coupling;decoupling;polyethylene (PE);copolymers