The transport behavior of H,, Nz, Oz, and CO,, was studied for blends of poly(ethy1ene oxide) (PEO) with a copolyester-polyurethane (PU) at various temperatures from 20 to 80°C. It was found that there was an abrupt change in slope or discontinuity around the melting point of PEO in Arrhenius plot o
Effect of temperature on gas permeation of polymer blends. II. Copolyester/copolyester–polyurethane
✍ Scribed by Guo Qipeng; Xu Hechang; Ma Dezhu
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1990
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 475 KB
- Volume
- 40
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
✦ Synopsis
Abstract
The transport behavior of H~2~, N~2~, CO~2~ was studied for blends of an aliphatic copolyester with a copolyester‐polyurethane (PU) at various temperatures from 20 to 80°C. It was found that there was an abrupt change in slope near the melting point of the copolyester in Arrhenius plot of the permeability vs. temperature. This was considered to be due to the phase changes in the blends. The relationship between the logarithm of gas permeability and blend composition were only slightly dependent on temperature owing to the low degree of crystallinity of the copolyester; however, the activation energy of gas permeation for the blends had different values below and above the melting temperature of copolyester. The T~g~ measurements by DSC suggested that the copolyester/PU blends are miscible. However, the gas permeation measurements revealed the blends are not molecularly homegeneous. The miscibility of the blends did not extend to the angstrom level.
📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES
When a benzene/cyclohexane mixture of 10 wt % benzene was permeated through side-chain liquid-crystalline polymer (LCP) membranes by pervaporation at various temperatures, the permeation rate increased with increasing permeation temperature. The LCP membranes also exhibited a benzene permselectivity
We investigated the effects of polymer molecular weight and temperature on Case II transport in the poly(methyl methacrylate)/methanol (PMMA/MeOH) system by a laser interferometric technique, using monodisperse polymer samples. Both the induction process and the steady-state front propagation were i