Effect of air-gap distance on the morphology and thermal properties of polyethersulfone hollow fibers
โ Scribed by Tai-Shung Chung; Xudong Hu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1997
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 437 KB
- Volume
- 66
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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โฆ Synopsis
By using 30/70 polyethersulfone/NMP ( N-methyl-2-pyrrolidone) solutions as an example, we have determined the role of air-gap distance on nascent fiber morphology, performance, and thermal properties. An increase in air-gap distance results in a hollow fiber with a less layer of fingerlike voids and a significant lower permeance. For the first time we have reported that the T g of a dry-jet wet-spun fiber prepared from one-polymer/one-solvent systems is lower than that of a wet-spun fiber, and T g decreases with an increase in air-gap distance. These interesting phenomena arise from the fact that different precipitation paths take place during the wet-spinning and dry-jet wet-spinning processes. Wet-spun fibers experience vigorous and almost instantaneous coagulations; it results in hollow fiber skins with a long-range random, unoriented chain entanglement, but loose structure. Dry-jet wet-spun fibers first go through a moisture-induced phase separation process and then a wet-phase inversion process; it results in external fiber skins with a short-range random, compact, and slightly oriented or stretched structure. As a result, the outskin of wet-spun fibers have a greater free volume and a higher first T g than that of the dry-jet wet-spun ones. Both SEM (scanning electronic microscope) photomicrographs and DSC (differential scanning calorimeter) analyses support our conclusion.
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Polyester (Egyptian) fibers were annealed at constant temperature (190ะC) with different annealing times. Density, crystallinity, mean square density fluctuation, mechanical loss factor, and molecular orientation were calculated. Densities and mechanical loss factor were determined using an acoustic