The composition of the high molecular weight tail in the branched polyethylene standard reference material SRM 1476 was studied in detail using size exclusion chromatography coupled with a refractive index, a viscosity, and a light scattering on-line detector. The light scattering determinations of
Branching and molecular weight distribution of polyethylene SRM 1476
β Scribed by Herman L. Wagner; Frank L. McCrackin
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1977
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 609 KB
- Volume
- 21
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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β¦ Synopsis
A method of determining the distribution of branching in a polymer is developed employing limiting viscosity numbers (intrinsic viscosity), gel permeation chromatography (GPC), and absolute molecular weight determinations of fractions of the whole polymer. A molecular weight calibration of the GPC column set is first determined employing these fractions. From the limiting viscosity number measurements of these fractions and their molecular weight distribution determined from the GPC chromatogram, the viscosity-molecular weight relationship is determined by a nonlinear least-squares fitting procedure. For the same molecular weight, the limiting viscosity number of the branched polymer is less than the limiting viscosity number of the linear polymer. From the ratio of the two, the number of branches per unit molecular weight of the branched polymer is calculated. This method was applied to SRM 1476, the standard reference branched polyethylene issued by the National Bureau of Standards. The branching density for the constituents of SRM 1476 rise from zero at molecular weights less than 10,000 to about 6 to 8X10-5 a t molecular weights of 50,000 and above. The branching of SRM 1476 was also determined by the method of Drott and Mendelson, giving a result in fair agreement with the above method.
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A comparison is made of two methods by which one may derive molecular weight distribution and degree of long-chain branching using only the measured solution viscosity of a branched polyethylene whole polymer and its GPC trace. These are (a) Drott and Mendelson method and (b) Ram and Miltz procedure
## Abstract A critical concentration was found for different compositions of UHMWPE/SBPE solutions, at which the concentration dependence of the reduced viscosity changes from low to high power. The critical concentration (__C__~c~) is shifted to a higher value with increasing amount of SBPE in the
Studies of the rheological properties of fractions of linear and branched polyethylenes have shown that the melt recovery of linear polyethylene fractions is very small and independent of molecular weight over a wide range. Fractions containing high degrees of long-chain branching, on the other hand