Title of article :
An investigation of the structure–property relationships
in melt-processable high-acrylonitrile copolymer filaments
Author/Authors :
Shawn R. Hutchinson، نويسنده , , Alan E. Tonelli، نويسنده , ,
Buphender S. Gupta، نويسنده , , David R. Buchanan، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
A comprehensive investigation was undertaken
to understand why the structure of a high-acrylonitrile
(AN) resin renders it melt processable, how it affects the
microstructure, and what filament properties it supports.
High-AN homo- and copolymers have excellent chemical
and ultraviolet light resistances that make them suited for
many engineered industrial applications. Traditionally,
these AN-copolymers are dissolved in a solvent and
extruded into fibers by dry and wet spinning, because they
tend to degrade rather than melt. Recent advances in
copolymer synthesis have created the first AN-resins that
can be melt processed, and, are produced more economically
and in an environmentally friendly way. The block
distributions were examined using solution nuclear magnetic
resonance. Thermal behavior of the solid-to-ductile
transitions was observed with differential scanning calorimetry
to gain insight into the nature of the temperaturedependent
solid-state interactions between chains. Filament
extrusion was conducted utilizing a range of parameters to
obtain filaments varying in structures and properties. Wideangle
X-ray diffraction was used to gain insight into the
solid-state conformations and organization of the copolymer
chains. It is concluded that melt-extruded filaments do
not develop a distinct semi-crystalline morphology, but
instead tend to develop a paracrystalline ordered structure.
Mechanical properties can be varied, and under optimal
conditions, compare favorably with those found in other
melt-extruded polymer fibers that are not, resistant to
chemical and UV exposure.
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science