화학공학소재연구정보센터
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics, Vol.44, No.9, 1364-1377, 2006
Melting and crystallization of poly(butylene terephthalate) by temperature-modulated and superfast calorimetry
Quantitative temperature-modulated differential scanning calorimetry (TMDSC) and superfast thin-film chip calorimetry (SFCC) are applied to poly(butylene terephthalate)s (PBT) of different thermal histories. The data are compared with those of earlier measured heat capacities of semicrystalline PBT by adiabatic calorimetry and standard DSC. The solid and liquid heat capacities, which were linked to the vibrational and conformational molecular motion, serve as references for the quantitative analyses. Using TMDSC, the thermodynamic and kinetic responses are separated between glass and melting temperature. The changes in crystallinity are evaluated, along with the mobile-amorphous and rigid-amorphous fractions with glass transitions centered at 314 and 375 K. The SFCC showed a surprising bimodal change in crystallization rates with temperature, which stretches down to 300 K. The earlier reported thermal activity at about 248 K was followed by SFCC and TMDSC and could be shown to be an irreversible endotherm and is not caused by a glass transition and rigid-amorphous fraction, as assumed earlier. (c) 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.