Journal of Applied Polymer Science, Vol.80, No.14, 2815-2822, 2001
High molecular weight tail and long-chain branching in low-density polyethylenes
The composition of the high molecular weight tail in branched low-density polyethylenes made by both tubular and autoclave reactors was studied in detail using size-exclusion chromatography (SEC) coupled with a viscosity detector (VD) and a two-angle light-scattering detector (LSD). The detection of a second peak at very small elution volumes in the light-scattering chromatogram but not in the refractive index chromatogram and viscosity chromatogram is due to high molecular weight species. It is also indicative of a change in the long-chain branching distribution. It was found that the intrinsic viscosity contraction factor g' scales with the radius of the gyration contraction factor, g, with the exponent, epsilon, having a value in the range 0.4-1.4. Furthermore, epsilon shows significant molar mass dependence.
Keywords:size-exclusion chromatography;polyethylene;long-chain branching;viscosity detector;radius of gyration;molecular structure