Thermodynamics of Polymer Blends Organized by Balanced Block Copolymer Surfactants Studied by Mean-Field Theories and Scattering

Parameters determined from binary experiments were used to predict the behavior of multicomponent A/B/A−C polymer blends, where A is saturated polybutadiene with 90% 1,2-addition (sPB90), B is polyisobutylene (PIB), and C is also saturated polybutadiene but with 63% 1,2-addition (sPB63). The polymer...

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Veröffentlicht in:Macromolecules 2004-09, Vol.37 (19), p.7401-7417
Hauptverfasser: Reynolds, Benedict J, Ruegg, Megan L, Balsara, Nitash P, Radke, Clayton J, Shaffer, Timothy D, Lin, Min Y, Shull, Kenneth R, Lohse, David J
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Parameters determined from binary experiments were used to predict the behavior of multicomponent A/B/A−C polymer blends, where A is saturated polybutadiene with 90% 1,2-addition (sPB90), B is polyisobutylene (PIB), and C is also saturated polybutadiene but with 63% 1,2-addition (sPB63). The polymers were chosen such that the binary interactions (A/B, A/C, and B/C) are analogous to those in oil (A)/water (B)/nonionic surfactant (A−C) systems, where A/B and A/C are unfavorable interactions (χ > 0) and B/C is a favorable interaction (χ < 0). The Flory−Huggins interaction parameters (χAB, χAC, and χBC) and the statistical segment lengths (l A, l B, and l C) were all determined experimentally by fitting the random phase approximation (RPA) to small-angle neutron scattering (SANS) data from the three binary homopolymer blends. These parameters were successfully used to predict the scattering from concentration fluctuations in a homogeneous A/B/A−C blend using multicomponent RPA. These same binary parameters were also used as the only inputs to self-consistent field theory (SCFT) calculations of ordered multicomponent polymer blends. The SCFT calculations enabled quantitative interpretation of the SANS profiles from microphase separated A/B/A−C blends. The phase separation temperatures predicted by theory for the blends were within the experimental error, and the theoretical domain spacings were within 10% of the experimental values.
ISSN:0024-9297
1520-5835
DOI:10.1021/ma049779d