Polymer, Vol.43, No.18, 4879-4886, 2002
The atactic polystyrene molecular weight effect on the thermal properties and crystal structure of syndiotactic polystyrene/atactic polystyrene blends
This work examined how the molecular weight of atactic polystyrene (aPS) affects the thermal properties and crystal structure of syndiotactic polystyrene (sPS)/aPS blends using differential scanning calorimetry, polarized light microscopy and wide angle X-ray diffraction (WAXD) technique. For comparative purposes, the structure and properties of the parent sPS was also investigated. The experimental results indicated that these blends showed single glass transition temperatures (T(g)s), implying the miscibility of these blends in the amorphous state regardless of the aPS molecular weight. The non-isothermal and isothermal melt crystallization of sPS were hindered with the incorporation of aPSs. Moreover, aPS with a lower molecular weight caused a further decrease in the crystallization rate of sPS. Complex melting behavior was observed for parent sPS and its blends as well. The melting temperatures of these blends were lower than those of the parent sPS, and they decreased as the molecular weight of aPS decreased. Compared with the results of the WAXD study, the observed complex melting behavior resulted from the mixed polymorphs (i.e. the (x and P forms) along with the melting-recrystallization-remelting of the 0 form crystals during the heating scans. The degree of melting-recrystallization-remelting phenomenon for each specimen was dependent primarily on how fast the sPS crystals were formed instead of the incorporation of aPSs. Furthermore, the existence of aPS in the blends, especially the lower molecular weight aPS, apparently reduced the possibility of forming the less stable alpha form in the sPS crystals.