Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.42, No.4, 694-706, 2002
A comparison of induction time and crystallization rate for syndiotactic polystyrene
One objective of this study was to measure the crystallization parameters for syndiotactic polystyrene (M-W = 244,000) to support a computer simulation of this material in an injection molding application. A second objective was to introduce a new crystallization rate equation that adequately predicts crystallization rates over a broader temperature range than the Hoffman-Lauritzen equation. A third objective was to establish a new clearly defined method for determining the true induction time of a semicrystalline polymer as a function of temperature. The new crystallization rate equation introduced in this study has been formulated to give appropriate crystallization rate constants for all the temperatures currently usable with the Hoffman-Lauritzen equation. In addition, this new equation also predicts appropriate crystallization rate constants outside the range of the Hoffman-Lauritzen equation from temperatures significantly below the glass transition temperature, T-g to temperatures significantly above the melting point. T-m. Interestingly, the isolation of the true isothermal induction times from apparent induction times in this study nicely mirrored the isothermal crystallization rates at each specific temperature. Both the true induction time and the crystallization rate curves were found to be similarly unsymmetrical as a function of temperature. Also, the temperature at the minimum induction time and the temperature at the peak crystallization rate determined from nonisothermal crystallization rate measurements were found to be nearly identical. Consequently, the results from this study strongly suggest that there is a significant and potentially very useful relationship between induction time analysis and crystallization rate kinetics.