This article is concerned with molecular orientation in liquid crystal (LC) monomers and the retention of orientation in crosslinked network polymers formed from them by photopolymerization. This is of importance because anisotropic mechanical and physical properties can be beneficial in certain str
Polymerization and viscoelastic behavior of networks from a dual-curing, liquid crystalline monomer
โ Scribed by J. W. Schultz; J. Bhatt; R. P. Chartoff; R. T. Pogue; J. S. Ullett
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1999
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 443 KB
- Volume
- 37
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-6266
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โฆ Synopsis
The network formation and viscoelastic behavior of a liquid crystalline monomer, whose structure includes both acrylate and acetylene reactive groups, have been studied. By combining both photo and thermal polymerization, the networks can be formed in two separate steps, with the initial photopolymerization dominated by acrylate crosslinking and subsequent thermal polymerization dominated by acetylene crosslinking.
In addition, the monomer exhibits a liquid crystalline phase. Photopolymerization while in the liquid crystal phase locks in the molecular ordering. Dynamic mechanical analysis shows that networks formed from the liquid crystalline phase have lower crosslink densities and narrower distributions of molecular weights between crosslinks when compared to networks formed from the isotropic phase (and at higher polymerization temperatures). After thermal postcure at 250ยฐC, the networks formed from the isotropic monomer have a 23% higher dynamic mechanical storage modulus (in the glassy state) than the networks formed from the liquid crystalline monomer. The thermally postcured networks have unusually high glass-transition temperatures, which exceed 300ยฐC.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
Two biphenyl compounds with diene groups at both ends of the biphenyl group were synthesized. A nematic phase was observed for both the biphenyl compounds. Bulk photopolymerization was investigated by differential scanning calorimetry. Reactivity and for- mation of a polymer network with uniaxial mo