Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.37, No.9, 1512-1525, 1997
Stability of Blends of Thermotropic Liquid-Crystalline Polymers with Thermoplastic Polymers
Breakup of fibers of a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer (TLCP) above the melting temperature in various ordinary polymers has been studied by capillary instability experiments on single TLCP fibers and by annealing experiments on extruded TLCP/thermoplast blends. The TLCP was an aromatic copolyester, Vectra A900, the matrix polymers were PP, PS, PC, PEI, PES, and PEBT. Both types of experiments show that the fiber/matrix morphology is, in general, highly unstable in the molten state. The TLCP fibers break up into droplets by a combination of Rayleigh distortions, end-pinching and retraction, depending on the system and shape of the fiber. Fibers of a thickness of similar to 1 mu m can break up in a few seconds. Breakup times of fibrous blends and individual fibers are in agreement provided size effects are accounted for. Rayleigh distortions develop exponentially in time up to relative distortions of 0.5 to 0.6. Breakup occurs within a range of wave numbers rather than at one distinct dominant wave number, which is shown to be the consequence of relatively large initial distortions. Apparent values for the interfacial tensions calculated with Tomotika’s theory turned out to be of the correct order of magnitude, ranging from 7 mN/m for Vectra/PES to 24 mN/m for Vectra/PP and to yield correct values of the interfacial tensions of PP/PS, PP/PC, and PS/PC using Antonow’s rule.
Keywords:INTERFACIAL-TENSION;MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES;COPOLYESTER;POLYCARBONATE;MORPHOLOGY;BREAKUP;MATRIX;THREAD;LCP;POLY(ETHYLENE-TEREPHTHALATE)