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Molecular size and solvation of low molecular weight poly(ethylene oxide) and phenol–formaldehyde resols in different solvents
Author(s) -
Riedl Bernard,
Vohl M.J.,
Calvé Louis
Publication year - 1990
Publication title -
journal of applied polymer science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.575
H-Index - 166
eISSN - 1097-4628
pISSN - 0021-8995
DOI - 10.1002/app.1990.070390211
Subject(s) - ethylene oxide , solvation , ethylene glycol , formaldehyde , molar mass distribution , polymer chemistry , phenol , polymer , solvent , chemistry , polymerization , molecular mass , size exclusion chromatography , materials science , organic chemistry , copolymer , enzyme
Several solvent systems are presently used to characterize the molecular weight of phenol–for‐maldehyde resins. However, results reported in the literature for different molecular weights may not be representative of true molecular weight, but rather may be distorted by aggregation and solvation. In this report an effort to clarify this situation was conducted, first by using a suitable calibration with poly(ethylene glycol) and then using this polymer as a molecular size standard to determine the size of phenol–formaldehyde oligomers in solution. In the calculation of the molecular sizes of phenol–formaldehyde resols, proper accounting of the variation of the Mark–Houwink parameters with molecular weight for low degrees of polymerization must be made for poly(ethylene glycol). The Mark–Houwink constants for poly(ethylene glycol) are very similar in presence or absence of salts, and are considered to be unaffected by solution ionic strength. It is not the case for phenol–formaldehyde, whose apparent molecular size varies with the nature of the solvent. The actual molecular weight and molecular dimension distribution are discussed for different type A resols used as adhesives in the wood composite industry.