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Liquid crystalline aromatic polyesters formed with terephthalic acid, phenyl hydroquinone, and napthalene or anthracene diols
Author(s) -
Khan Nazir,
Bashir Zahir,
Price Duncan M.
Publication year - 1995
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.1995.070580913
Subject(s) - terephthalic acid , liquid crystal , materials science , polymer , anthracene , polyester , polymer chemistry , diol , glass transition , hydroquinone , chemical engineering , organic chemistry , composite material , chemistry , optoelectronics , engineering
The synthesis and characterization of aromatic copolyesters containing terephthalic acid and phenyl hydroquinone as the major constituents and either 1,4‐napthalene diol or 1,4‐anthracene diol as the minority comonomer is described. Both polymers melted in the vicinity of 300°C, giving birefringent fluids. Optical microscopy showed Schlieren textures consisting predominantly of inversion walls characteristic of the nematic phase. The clearing temperature was in the vicinity of 460°C, but was accompanied by charring. DSC experiments showed a high glass transition temperature of 130–160°C for both polymers. Crystalnematic and nematic‐isotropic endotherms were observed on heating; however, degradation took place near the isotropization temperature. Thus, on cooling, the sequence was reversible only if the previous heating was beyond the crystal‐nematic but below the isotropization temperature. The polymers were stable in terms of gross weight loss until about 450°C, though there were indications that crosslinking occurred above about 400°C over a short period of time. The polymers formed low‐viscosity injection‐molding compounds, but to use them effectively, it would require mold‐gate designs that reduce the “jetting” tendency for liquid crystal polymer melts, which result in weld lines. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.