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Solid state extrusion of vinylidene fluoride (VF2)/vinylidene trifluoride (VF3) copolymers. II: Structure development
Author(s) -
Lee J. S.,
Cakmak M.
Publication year - 1993
Publication title -
polymer engineering and science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1548-2634
pISSN - 0032-3888
DOI - 10.1002/pen.760332308
Subject(s) - materials science , extrusion , crystallinity , opacity , polymer , melting point , copolymer , composite material , endothermic process , glass transition , crystallography , optics , chemistry , physics , organic chemistry , adsorption
Abstract Copolymers of vinylidene fluoride (VF2) and vinyltrifluoride (VF3) exhibit Curie transition temperatures well below their melting points. Above these endothermic transitions, they soften and this behavior helps in their solid state extrudability. In this paper, the effects of extrusion speed, temperature, and draw ratio on structure development in 60/40 and 72/28 VF2/VF3 copolymer compositions are presented. With the increase of extrusion draw ratio the Curie transition temperature of the extrudates decreased and melting temperature increased. This behavior suggested that the chains in the crystalline regions contain higher levels of conformational defects while overall crystallinity is increased. Unoriented polymers were optically opaque and extrudates were found to be transparent as a result of breakdown on the superstructural level which decreases the scattering effects in the visible wavelength range. The micro beam WAXS studies on the samples taken from the entrance of the dies revealed that the unoriented core is surrounded by alternating unoriented and oriented layers close to the core. The remainder of the skin layers are found to be oriented with local symmetry axes and main chain orientation being parallel to the die wall surface. The regions that are found to be oriented were also found to be optically translucent and unoriented regions were optically opaque. This structure turns uniformly transparent–and thus oriented‒as the polymer enters the die. The existence of layered structure suggests that highly localized yielding occurs during early states of deformation at the converging entrance region of the die. Examination of the radial structural variation in extrudates with micro beam X‐ray diffraction technique revealed that the local symmetry axes are tilted away from the extrusion direction and this tilt angle reduces at the sample macro‐symmetry axis at the core of the samples. This indicated that the tilted structure developed at the converging entrance region is partially preserved through the die. While the orientation of local symmetry axes varies from skin to core in the extrudates, the orientation of chains with respect to these local symmetry axes remains relatively unaffected.

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