Title of article
Dispersity and spinnability: Why highly polydisperse polymer solutions are desirable for electrospinning
Author/Authors
Palangetic، نويسنده , , Ljiljana and Reddy، نويسنده , , Naveen Krishna and Srinivasan، نويسنده , , Siddarth and Cohen، نويسنده , , Robert E. and McKinley، نويسنده , , Gareth H. and Clasen، نويسنده , , Christian، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
Pages
12
From page
4920
To page
4931
Abstract
We develop new criteria that describe the minimum concentration limits controlling the spinnability of dilute and semi-dilute flexible polymer solutions with high molecular weight and varying polydispersity. By asserting that the finite and bounded extensional viscosity of the solution is the key material property determining the stability of a filament during spinning, we propose a new scaling relating the minimum necessary concentration of a polymer cspin to its molecular weight M and the quality of the solvent (through the excluded volume exponent ν) of the form c spin ∼ M − ( ν + 1 ) . This new scaling differs from the classical interpretation of the coil overlap concentration c∗ or entanglement concentration ce as the minimum concentration required to increase the viscosity of the spinning dope, and rationalizes the surprising spinnability of high molecular weight polymers at concentrations much lower than ce. Furthermore, we introduce the concept of an extensibility average molecular weight ML as the appropriate average for the description of polydisperse solutions undergoing an extension-dominated spinning process. In particular it is shown that this extensibility average measure, and thus the solution spinnability, is primarily determined by the extensibility of the highest molecular weight fractions. For highly polydisperse systems this leads to an effective lowering of the minimum required concentration for successful fibre spinning (in comparison to narrowly distributed polymer solutions of similar weight average molecular weights). These predictions are validated with experimental observations of the electrospinnablity of mono- and polydisperse poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) solutions as well as a model bimodal blend, and through comparison to published literature data on the minimum spinnable polymer concentration for a variety of flexible long chain polymers over a range of molecular weights.
Keywords
electrospinning , Polydisperse polymers , Extensibility average molecular weight
Journal title
Polymer
Serial Year
2014
Journal title
Polymer
Record number
1742482
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