## An investigation of the relation of polymer structure to carbon-coke of various synthetic resins and polymer intermediates has been conducted. The quantity of carboncoke formed with a synthetic resin is converted to carbon at 840Β°C is believed influenced by the ease and degree of aromatization
Electron diffraction of synthetic polymers: The model compound approach to polymer structure
β Scribed by Brisse, F.
- Publisher
- Wiley (John Wiley & Sons)
- Year
- 1989
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 718 KB
- Volume
- 11
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0741-0581
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β¦ Synopsis
X-ray fiber diffraction is a technique most often used to establish the structure of chemically regular crystalline polymers. However, this technique has many shortcomings. Some of them are: ambiguities regarding the choice of the space group, limited intensity data, often large diffraction spots, and overlapping intensities. Microsingle crystals of synthetic polymers, when they can be produced, happen to have dimensions that are well suited to being studied by electron diffraction. Electron diffraction data from microsingle crystals often complement the X-ray fiber data.
Strictly speaking, one does not solve the crystal structure of a polymer in the conventional way but rather one chooses from among many potentially acceptable models the one which fits the X-ray and/or the electron diffraction data best. The various steps of model building, its placing within the unit cell, and structure refinement will be discussed. X-ray diffraction, Polyesters, Nylons, Model compounds
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
A~tract--Five main-chain polymers containing benzene rings and conjugated double bonds in their structure and five low-molecular-weight model compounds analogous to the polymers were prepared; their phase behaviour was studied by optical microscopy, DSC and MNDO semi-empirical calculations. The effe