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Evaporative purification to produce highly...
Journal article

Evaporative purification to produce highly monodisperse polymers: Application to polystyrene for n=3–13 and quantification of Tg from oligomer to polymer

Abstract

We demonstrate the use of selective thermal evaporation to separate and purify small molecular weight polymers into highly monodisperse polymers over an extended range of polymerization index. By exploiting the calculated dependence of polymer vapor pressure on polymerization index N and temperature T, we can isolate individual components (N-mers) of an initially polydisperse mixture. To demonstrate this ability, we consider polystyrene samples of Mw=600 g/mol and Mw=890 g/mol with narrow molecular weight distributions, as well as a Mw=1200 g/mol sample with a broader distribution. In each case we are able to separate the sample into milligram quantities of many different components. Using this technique, we have been able to isolate N-mers from 3 to 13. We use differential scanning calorimetry to measure the Tg values of these components, and find that the components have the same Tg values independent of the Mw or polydispersity of the sample they originate from. We find that even initially narrow molecular weight distributions have many different components whose Tg values can differ by more than 50 K. Calculations suggest the isolated components have Mw/Mn values less than 1.001 and through a second iteration of the process could become as low as 1.000 003. The measured Tg values for the N-mers as well as large N polymers are well described by a simple relation derived from the Fox equation for the Tg of mixtures.

Authors

Zhu S; Chai Y; Forrest JA

Journal

Physical Review Materials, Vol. 1, No. 2,

Publisher

American Physical Society (APS)

Publication Date

July 1, 2017

DOI

10.1103/physrevmaterials.1.025605

ISSN

2476-0455

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