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Journal ArticleDOI

The crystallinity of poly(phenylene sulfide) and its effect on polymer properties

D. G. Brady
- 01 Sep 1976 - 
- Vol. 20, Iss: 9, pp 2541-2551
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TLDR
In this paper, an approximate degree of crystallinity, termed crystallinity index (Ci), could be readily assigned based on x-ray measurements, based on which a poly(phenylene sulfide) molding with very low surface crystallinity was obtained.
Abstract
The crystallinity and crystallizability of poly(phenylene sulfide) have been examined by a number of common techniques. Several provided qualitative information, but only one, x-ray diffraction, was considered sufficiently reliable and reproducible to allow quantitative comparisons. Based on x-ray measurements, an approximate degree of crystallinity, termed crystallinity index (Ci), could be readily assigned. According to this method, virgin polymer possesses significant crystallinity (Ci ≈ 65%). Curing (crosslinking) the resin below its melting point did not change the crystallinity but did affect the crystallizability. Lightly cured resin suitable for molding and film extrusion was easily quenched from the melt to give amorphous polymer. The amorphous samples crystallized rapidly when heated to temperatures > 121°C (250°F). At mold temperatures below 93°C (200°F), moldings with very low surface crystallinity were produced. Annealing (204°C, 400°F) caused rapid crystallization of such moldings, and changes in crystallinity were correlated with observed changes in physical properties. The resin crystallizes so rapidly that these quenched moldings possessed a crystallinity gradient, the internal crystallinity being substantially greater. At high mold temperatures (121–204°C, 250–400°F), moldings very similar to fully annealed specimens were obtained.

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Journal ArticleDOI

An apparent double glass transition of polyphenylene sulfide in blends with polyarylate

TL;DR: Injection molded blends of polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) and polyarylate (PAR) are phase separated as evidenced by transmission electron microscopy (TEM) micrographs and the existence of glass transition temperatures (Tg's) near 100 °C and 190 °C as mentioned in this paper.
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Process comparison on the microstructure and mechanical properties of fiber-reinforced polyphenylene sulfide using MuCell technology:

TL;DR: The MuCell process is a special injection molding process which utilizes supercritical gas (nitrogen) to create integral foam sandwiches as mentioned in this paper, which has lower weight, higher specific properties.
Journal ArticleDOI

An examination of the optical absorption spectrum of poly(p-phenylene sulphide) films when exposed to arsenic pentafluoride: comparison with poly(p-phenylene)

TL;DR: In contrast to the predictions of simple theory, the polaron levels are not symmetrically displaced about the band-gap center, and this may be attributed to the dopant-ion impurity potentials.
Journal ArticleDOI

Time-resolved FTIR study of crystallization behavior of melt-crystallized poly(phenylene sulfide)

TL;DR: In this paper, the crystallization behavior of melt-crystallized poly(phenylene sulfide) (PPS) was studied using time-resolved Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy measurements.
Journal ArticleDOI

Moderation of thermoplastic composite crystallinity and mechanical properties through in situ manufacturing and post-manufacturing tempering: Part 1 - Mechanical characterisation

TL;DR: In this article, the authors investigated the sensitivity of CF-PPS thermoplastic composite material to automated fiber placement process parameters: specifically the surface temperature of the layup tool and the addition of simple tempering post-manufacturing.