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1.
Blends of poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) with three different thermotropic liquid crystalline polyesters (TLCPs) were prepared. The first TLCP (HBH-6) consists of diad aromaticester type mesogenic units and the hexamethylene spacers along the main chain, and the second (TB-S6) is a wholly aromatic polyester TLCP having alkoxy side groups on the terephthaloyl moiety. The last (TR-4,6) is an LC copolymer comsisting of triad aromatic ester type mesogenic units and two differents spacers; tetramethylene and hexamethylene units. Blends of TLCP with PBT were melt spum at different LCP contents and differnt draw ratios to produce monofilaments. For the HBH-6/PBT and TB-S6/PBT blends, the ultimate tensile strength showed a maximum value at the 5 wt% level of LCP in the blends, and then it decreased when the LCP content was increased up to 20%. On the other hand, the initial modulus monotonically increased with increasing LCP content in all cases. The blends with TB-S6 showed the highest tensile properties of the three blends systems. This can be ascribed to the highest rigidity of the polymer chain, which still carries relatively long alkoxy substituents that promote sufficient adhesion between the LCP and PBT matrix. When compared with the PBT fiber itself, the fibers obtained from the 5% TB-S6/PBT blends exhibited an improvement in tensile strength by > 25% and in tensile modulus by ~ 200%.  相似文献   

2.
Ternary in situ butyl rubber (IIR)/poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) and liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) blends were prepared by compression molding. The LCP used was a versatile Vectra A950, and the matrix material was IIR/PBT 50/50 by weight. Morphological, thermal, and mechanical properties of blends were investigated using scanning electron microscopy (SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), differential scanning calorimetry, and thermogravimetric analysis (TGA). Microscopy study (SEM) showed that formation of fibers is increasing with the increasing amount of LCP A950. Microscopic examination of the fractured surface confirmed the presence of a polymer coating on LCP fibrils. This can be attributed to some interactions including both chemical and physical one. The increased compatibility in polymer blends, consisting of IIR/PBT, by the presence of LCP A950 may be explained by the adsorption phenomena of the polymer chains onto the LCP fibrils. SEM and AFM images provided the evidence of the interaction between IIR/PBT and the LCP. Dynamic mechanical analyses (DMA) and TGA measurements showed that the composites possessed a remarkably higher modulus and heat stability than the unfilled system. Storage modulus for the ternary blend containing 50 wt% of LCP exhibits about 94% increment compared with binary blend of IIR/PBT. From the above results, it is suggested that the LCP A950 can act as reinforcement agent in the blends. Moreover, the fine dispersion of LCP was observed with no extensional forces applied during mixing, indicating the importance of interfacial adhesion for the fibril formation. POLYM. COMPOS., 2009. © 2008 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

3.
Ternary in situ composites based on poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT), polyamide 66 (PA66), and semixflexible liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) were systematically investigated. The LCP used was an ABA30/PET liquid crystalline copolyesteramide based on 30 mol % of p‐aminobenzoic acid (ABA) and 70 mol % of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET). The specimens for thermal and rheological measurements were prepared by batch mixing, while samples for mechanical tests were prepared by injection molding. The results showed that the melting temperatures of the PBT and PA66 phases tend to decrease with increasing LCP addition. They also shifted toward each other due to the compatibilization of the LCP. The torque measurements showed that the ternary blends exhibited an apparent maximum near 2.5–5 wt % LCP. Thereafter, the viscosity of the blends decreased dramatically at higher LCP concentrations. Furthermore, the torque curves versus the PA66 composition showed that the binary PBT/PA66 blends can be classified as negative deviation blends (NDBs). The PBT/PA66/LCP blends containing up to 15 wt % LCP were termed as positive deviation blends (PDBs), while the blends with the LCP ≥25 wt % exhibited an NDB behavior. Finally, the tensile tests showed that the stiffness and tensile strength of ternary in situ composites were generally improved with increasing LCP content. The impact strength of ternary composites initially increased by the LCP addition, then deteriorated when the LCP content was higher than 10 wt %. The correlation between the mechanical properties and morphology of the blends is discussed. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 77: 1975–1988, 2000  相似文献   

4.
The ternary blends of acrylate rubber (ACM), poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT), and liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) were prepared by varying the amount of LCP but fixing the ratio of ACM and PBT, using melt mixing procedure. The influence of interactions on thermal and dynamic mechanical properties of the blends was investigated over the complete composition range. The techniques applied were Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FTIR), differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), thermogravimetry (TG), and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). The FTIR spectroscopy analysis showed reduction in the intensity of the peak corresponding to epoxy groups of ACM with increasing heating time at 290°C. This implies that there is a chemical reaction between the epoxy and end groups of PBT and LCP. Glass transition temperature (Tg) and melting temperature (Tm) of the blends were affected depending on the LCP weight percent in the ACM/PBT blend, respectively. This further suggests the strong interfacial interactions between the blend components. In presence of ACM, the nucleating effect of LCP was more pronounced for the PBT phase. The thermogravimetric study showed improved thermal stability for the blends with the increasing LCP content. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 100: 3904–3912, 2006  相似文献   

5.
Ternary in‐situ poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT)/poly(acrylonitrile‐butadienestyrene) (ABS)/liquid crystalline polymer(LCP) blends were prepared by injection molding. The LCP used was a versatile Vectra A950, and the matrix material was PBT/ABS 60/40 by weight. Maleic anhydride (MA) copolymer and solid epoxy resin (bisphenol type‐A) were used as compatibilizers for these blends. The tensile, dynamic mechanical, impact, morphology and thermal properties of the blends were studied. Tensile tests showed that the tensile stregth of PBT/ABS/LCP blend in the longitudinal direction increased markedly with increasing LCP content. However, it decreased sharply with increasing LCP content up to 5 wt%; thereafter it decreased slowly with increasing LCP content in the transverse direction. The modulus of this blend in the longitudinal direction appeared to increase considerably with increasing LCP content, whereas the incorporation of LCP into PBT/ABS blends had little effect on the modulus in the transverse direction. The impact tests revealed that the Izod impact strength of the blends in longitudinal direction decreased with increasing LCP content up to 10 wt%; thereafter it increased slowly with increasing LCP. Dynamic mechanical analyses (DMA) and thermogravimetric measurements showed that the heat resistance and heat stability of the blends tended to increase with increasing LCP content. SEM observation, DMA, and tensile measurement indicated that the additions of epoxy and MA copolymer to PBT/ABS matrix appeared to enhance the compatibility between PBT/ABS and LCP.  相似文献   

6.
Binary blends of a reactive ethylene-based terpolymer with polybutylene terephthalate (PBT) and with a liquid crystalline polyester (LCP) were studied to clarify the possible interactions between the blended polymers. The aim was to determine the suitability of the reactive terpolymer containing epoxy reactivity as a compatibilizer in blends of polypropylene (PP) and these two polyesters. The binary blends exhibited increased viscosity during blending, changes in the crystallization of the PBT phase, and an intimate contact between the blended polymers, which pointed to strong interactions or chemical reactions between the compatibilizer and both PBT and LCP. FTIR analysis confirmed the reaction of the epoxide and formation of new esters. Most probably the carboxyl end groups of the polyesters reacted with the epoxy group of the compatibilizer. In the second part of the work the same terpolymer was shown to act as a compatibilizer in PP/PBT and PP/LCP blends. This behavior was based on good mixing with the PP phase and on the chemical reactivity or strong interactions with the polyesters demonstrated in the investigations on binary blends. Addition of 5 wt% of the compatibilizer improved the impact strength, especially in PP/PBT blends where synergistic behavior was found at compositions of 80/20 and 20/80. In PP/LCP blends, the compatibilizer significantly improved the impact strength of unnotched samples at 20 wt % LCP content. In both blends, the compatibilizer reduced the size of the dispersed domains and caused them to attach better in the matrix. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

7.
The phase behavior and rheology of binary blends of polycarbonate (PC) and a liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) have been investigated. The thermotropic LCP employed was a semiflexible polyester synthesized by melt condensation of t-butylhydroquinone and 4,4′ dichloroformyl-α,ω-diphenoxyhexane. It shows a distinct nematic-to-isotropic transition in the pure state and in the blends. Results of DSC and optical microscopy indicate that the LCP is solubilized in the mixture for weight fractions of LCP less than about 0.05 and shows partial miscibility with PC over the rest of the composition range. The phase separation is considered to be driven by both isotropic and anisotropic interactions between constituent chains. Dynamic oscillatory measurements show that there is some interaction between the separate isotropic and anisotropic phases, with complex viscosities of the blends being intermediate between those of pure components and showing significant deviation from a logarithmic rule-of-mixtures. © 1996 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

8.
合成了一种含有磺酸基的液晶离聚物(LCI),并研究了LCI作为相容剂对丙烯腈-丁二烯-苯乙烯三元共聚物/聚对苯二甲酸丁二醇酯(ABS/PBT)共混体系力学性能的影响。采用扫描电镜(SEM)、差示扫描量热仪(DSC)和热失重(TGA)分析对ABS/PBT/LCI共混物的热性能、微观形态和相容性进行了研究。研究结果表明LCI的加入,改善了二者的相容性,从而提高了共混物的拉伸强度、断裂伸长率以及缺口冲击强度。  相似文献   

9.
Thermotropic LCP/LCP fiber blends were prepared by a combination of meltblending and hot-drawing, using a wholly aromatic copolyester KU-9211 (also called K161 from Bayer A.G.) and an aliphatic containing LCP (liquid crystalline polymer) PET/PHB60 (from Kodak Tennessee Eastman). Morphological evidence, including scanning electron (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM), showed that the dispersed phase consisted primarily of highly oriented, 0.5 to 2 μm diameter rigid-rods of aromatic fibers imbedded in a matrix of predominantly aliphatic LCP fibrils with diameters in the range of 20 to 50 nm. An interphase of approximately 50 nm strongly bonded the two phases together. The fiber blends were characterized using dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA), thermogravimetric analysis (TGA), gas chromotography/mass spectroscopy (GC/MS), and rheological measurements. It appears that the processing conditions employed for melt blending had caused PET/PHB60 to undergo chain scission, thereby creating chemical interactions between the two LCP components during the melt blending process. Differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) thermograms as well as nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spectra of the extracted fraction from the mixture of 30 wt% K161/70 wt% PET(PHB60) confirmed the chemical interaction between the two thermotropic liquid crystalline polymers.  相似文献   

10.
This paper discusses the effect of melt drawing on the mechanical properties and morphology of liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) and thermoplastic polymer blends. Extruded fibers and films of LCP/polymer blends were melt drawn to develop uniaxial orientation of the dispersed LCP phase. The longitudinal modulus increased with increasing draw. The increase in modulus was due to higher aspect ratio of the LCP fibrils and improved molecular orientation of the LCP chains within the fibrils. Laminated composites were prepared using the extruded sheets as prepregs. The mechanical properties and the coefficient of thermal expansion (CTE) of the prepreg and the laminates agreed well with predictions from conventional composite lamination theories.  相似文献   

11.
In this study, randomly oriented in situ composites based on liquid‐crystalline polymers (LCPs) were prepared by thermal compression moulding. The LCP employed was a semi‐flexible liquid‐crystalline copolyesteramide with 30 mol% of p‐aminobenzoic acid (ABA) and 70 mol% of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET). The matrices were poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) and polyamide 66 (PA66). The rheological properties, compatibility and morphological structures of these in situ composites were investigated. The results showed that PA66‐LCP and PBT–LCP component pairs of the composites are miscible in the molten state, but partially compatible in the solid state. The ratios of viscosity, λ1 = ηLCPPA66 and λ2 = ηLCPPBT, are all greater than 1.0. However, the melt viscosity of the LCP/PBT and LCP/PA66 blend is much lower than that of PBT and PA66, and it decreases markedly with increasing LCP content. When the LCP/PA66 or LCP/PBT blends are compression moulded, the LCP/PA66 or LCP/PBT melts and flows easily due to their low viscosity, and the LCP phases in the melts deform easily along the flow directions, which are random. It leads to uniformly dispersed LCP micro‐fibres randomly orientation in the thermoplastic matrix due to the compatibility between the blending components. © 2003 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

12.
Blends of a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer, LCP, (4,4′-dicarboxy diphenyl ether modified poly(phenyl-1,4-phenylene terephthalate)) with polycarbonate and polysulfone were prepared and characterized with respect to their thermal properties, viscoelastic behavior, processability and mechanical properties. The processability of the thermoplastics was significantly improved by the addition of small amounts of LCP. This was also reflected by decreases in the steady shear viscosities, though the dynamic complex viscosities of the blends were generally similar or higher than those of the individual component polymers. Composite fibers were spun from the blends and the tensile moduli and strengths were consistent with a morphology of highly oriented LCP microfibrils with high aspect ratios dispersed in the thermoplastic fiber. The properties increased with increasing draw ratio.  相似文献   

13.
The relationship between the microstructure developed during injection molding of liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) containing blends and their mechanical properties, was studied. A wholly aromatic copolyester LCP was melt blended in various levels with polycarbonate (PC), poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT), Nylon 6 (N-6), and amorphous nylon (AN). In all cases the LCP was the minor component. The resulting injection molded structure had a distinct skin core morphology, where elongated fibrous LCP particles comprised the skin layer and spherical and ellipsoidal ones composed the core section. The highest elongation and the finest diameter LCP fibrils were obtained with AN/LCP system, followed by PC/LCP. PBT/LCP blends showed a coarser morphology, while N-6/LCP system did not correlate with the tensile moduli of the injection molded specimens. AN/LCP blends demonstrated the highest moduli values, consistent with the highest orientations observed using electron microscopy, followed by PC/LCP, PBT/LCP, and N-6/LCP. Finally, tensile strength levels were correlated with both orientation levels and interfacial adhesion between the polyblend components. AN/LCP that exhibited the highest orientation and good adhesion appearance gave the highest tensile strength values followed by PC/LCP, PBT/LCP, and N-6/LCP polyblends.  相似文献   

14.
Blends of poly(ethylene terephthalate-co-p-oxybenzoate) (PET–PHB) with poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) have been studied in the form of as-spun and drawn fibers. Mechanical properties of drawn blend fibers (DR-6.0) up to 10 wt % liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) component exhibit significant improvement in modulus and strength. With the addition of 10 wt % LCP content in PET matrix, the modulus increases from 11.78 to 17.72 GPa, and the strength increases from 0.76 to 1.0 GPa in comparison to the PET homopolymer. With further addition of LCP content, the properties drop down. Scanning electron microscopy studies of drawn blend fibers show that up to 10 wt % LCP content the blends contain the LCP domains in the size range of 0.07–0.2 μm and are well distributed in the PET matrix. © 1995 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.  相似文献   

15.
The structure and properties of the as-spun fibers of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) blends with a thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer (LCP), Vectra A900, were studied in detail. The DSC results indicate that the LCP component may act as a nucleating agent promoting the crystallization of the PET matrix from the glassy state but which inhibits its crystallization from the melt due to the existence of an LCP supercooled mesophase. The effect of the drawdown ratio on the orientation of the as-spun blend fibers is highly composition-dependent, which is mainly associated with the formation of LCP fibrils during melt spinning. The modulus of the as-spun blend fibers has a significant increase as the content of LCP reaches 10%, while the tensile strength has a slightly decreasing tendency. The mechanical properties of the as-spun blend fibers could be well improved by heat treatment because of a striking increase in the crystallinity of the PET matrix. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 66: 217–224, 1997  相似文献   

16.
Abstract

The purpose of the present study was to investigate the fibrillisation process of liquid crystalline polymers (LCPs) in an amorphous poly(phenylene ether) (PPE) matrix during melt blending and a subsequent drawing operation, as well as to analyse the relationship between morphology and mechanical properties of the fibrillar reinforced LCP/PPE blends. In order to understand the effect of the compatibility between the blend partners, an additional set of LCP/PEE blends, containing different amounts of a compatibiliser, was studied too. The processing steps included: (i) melt extrusion and continuous hot stretching for fibrillisation of the LCP component in the different LCP/PPE blends, and (ii) compression (CM) or injection moulding (IM) of the drawn blends at temperatures below the melting temperature (Tm) of the LCPs. Samples from each processing stage were characterised by means of scanning electron microscopy (SEM), wide and small angle X-ray scattering (WAXS and SAXS), and mechanical testing. SEM and WAXS showed that the as extruded blends were isotropic, but after hot stretching the LCP components became highly oriented, with a high aspect ratio and a diameter of the fibrils between 0·4 and 3 μm. The fibrillated structure of the LCPs in the blends could be preserved after the compression and injection moulding only at temperatures below Tm of the LCPs. Addition of a compatibiliser to the LCP/PPE blend did not remarkably improve the adhesion between the components, as a result of the large difference between the coefficients of thermal expansion of the blend partners, which leads to different shrinkage conditions of the LCP fibrils and the PPE matrix. The flexural modulus (E) of all IM blends increased stepwise with an increase in the weight (wt) fraction of the LCP. At the same time, the highest values for the flexural strength (σ) were obtained for the LCP/PPE blends containing 5 wt-% LCP.  相似文献   

17.
Blending of thermotropic liquid crystalline polyesters (LCPs) with conventional polymers could result in materials that can be used as an alternative for short fiber‐reinforced thermoplastic composites, because of their low melt viscosity as well as their inherent high stiffness and strength, high use temperature, and excellent chemical resistance and low coefficient of expansion. In most of the blends was used LCP of 40 mol % of poly(ethylene terephthalate) (PET) and 60 mol % of p‐acetoxybenzoic acid (PABA). In this work, blends of several copolyesters having various PABA compositions from 10 to 70 mol % and poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) were prepared and their rheological and thermal properties were investigated. For convenience, the copolyesters were designated as PETA‐x, where x is the mol % of PABA. It was found that PET‐60 and PET‐70 copolyesters decreased the melt viscosity of PBT in the blends and those PBT/PETA‐60 and PBT/PETA‐70 blends showed different melt viscosity behaviors with the change in shear rate, while blends of PBT and PET‐x having less than 50 mol % of PABA exhibited totally different rheological behaviors. The blends of PBT with PETA‐50, PETA‐60, and PETA‐70 showed the morphology of multiple layers of fibers. © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 74: 1797–1806, 1999  相似文献   

18.
Blends of low‐density polyethylene (LDPE) and a glass‐filled thermotropic liquid crystalline polymer (LCP‐g) have been prepared by melt mixing techniques. The thermal transitions, dynamic behavior, morphology and crystalline properties of the blends have been measured by DSC, DMTA, SEM and XRD respectively. The crystallinity decreased with increase in LCP‐g content in the blends. At higher levels of LCP‐g, crystal growth is favored in the PE phase. From DSC, it is found that the thermal stability of the blends increased with the LCP‐g content. The variation of storage modulus, loss modulus and stiffness as a function of blend ratio suggested the phase inversion at the 40–50% level of LCP‐g in the blend. SEM studies revealed that with the increase in LCP‐g content, the flow of the matrix was restricted.  相似文献   

19.
Blends of polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) and liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) were prepared by varying the amount of LCP when using a melt mixing technique. The rheological, morphological, thermal, and dynamic mechanical properties of the blends were investigated. The viscosity of the blends was decreased with the increasing LCP content in the blends up to 20% of LCP. With further loadings of LCP a slight improvement in viscosity was observed. This decrease in the viscosity was attributed to be the interlayer slip of the polymers due to formation of the elongated fibrils of LCP, whereas at higher amounts of LCP the fibril nature of LCP was not apparent, which is revealed by the scanning electron microscopic study. The differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) results showed a shift in the melting temperature (Tm) of PTFE with the addition of LCP. This shift in the Tm of PTFE is due to increasing crystallinity. This is further supported by the X-ray diffraction (XRD) and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) studies.  相似文献   

20.
Fibers (strands) with various draw ratios were spun from the liquid crystalline state of a pure aromatic liquid crystalline copoly(ester amide) and the melts of its blend with polycarbonate. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM), wide angle X-ray scattering (WAXS), and differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) were employed to investigate the structure and properties of the resulting fibers. Mechanical properties of the fibers were also evaluated. It was found that both the crystallite size and heat of fusion of the liquid crystalline polymer (LCP) increase steadily with draw ratio. However, the crystal-nematic transition temperature of the LCP is virtually unaffected by drawing. Moreover, heat of fusion of LCP is much smaller than that of isotropic condensation polymers despite the presence of very sharp diffraction peaks in WAXS measurements. These results are ascribed to the (semi)rigid rod nature of the LCP chains and the persistence of an ordered structure in the LCP melt, i.e., entropy effect. It was further observed that tensile modulus and tensile strength along fiber axis rise with draw ratio for the composite fibers. The elastic modulus of the composite fibers were found to be as high as 19 GPa and tensile strength reached 146 MPa with draw ratios below 40 and an LCP content of 30 wt%. Compared with the thermoplastic matrix, the elastic modulus and tensile strength of the in-situ composite have increased by 7.3 times and 1.4 times, respectively, with the addition of only 30 wt% LCP. This improvement in mechanical properties is attributed to fibrillation of the LCP phase in the blend and the increasing orientation of the LCP chains along the fiber axis during drawing.  相似文献   

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