A study has been made of the relaxation phenomena in three series of glassy polyurethans in the temperature range from -190 to -100° and at various frequencies up to 110 Hz using dynamic mechanical and dielectric...
Blends of poly(2,6‐dimethyl‐1,4‐phenylene ether) (PPO) and atactic polystyrene (PS) have been prepared by mechanically mixing powders of the two polymers and subjecting the mixtures to three different thermal treat...
Blends of poly(2,6‐dimethyl‐1,4‐phenylene ether) (PPO) and atactic polystyrene (PS) have been prepared by mechanically mixing powders of the two polymers and subjecting the mixtures to three different thermal treatments. Three different compositions were studied by the dynamic mechanical and DSC techniques. The weight fractions of PPO in the mixtures were 0.25, 0.50 and 0.75. The dynamic mechanical measurements indicate that partial mixing took place but that two distinct phases, one rich in PS and the other in PPO, exist in all the mixtures studied. Each phase exhibits a characteristic relaxation peak associated with the glass transition of that phase. DSC measurements, on the other hand, reveal only a single glass transition apparently characteristic of the PS rich phase in each case. The results indicate that a given type of experiment will indicate compatibility or incompatibility depending upon the size of the molecular process it represents.
This investigation provides the first reported viscosity measurements on cholesteryl myristate. Viscosities were measured as a function of both temperature and shear over temperatures corresponding to the isotropic li...
This investigation provides the first reported viscosity measurements on cholesteryl myristate. Viscosities were measured as a function of both temperature and shear over temperatures corresponding to the isotropic liquid, the cholesteric mesophase, and the smectic mesophase. The myristate ester was chosen for study because its multiple phase transitions have been previously shown to be reproducible. The phases also persist over relatively long temperature ranges. The viscosity measurements were made at lower shear rates than previously reported for esters of cholesterol by using a Weissenberg Rheogoniometer. These are the first cone-and-plate viscosity measurements reported for any esters of cholesterol. The shear rates in this cone-and-plate viscometer are homogeneous and variable. The results show large breaks in viscosity behavior at the independently-measured thermodynamic transitions between the crystal, smectic, cholesteric, and isotropic states. Viscosities for the isotropic state are Newtonian throughout. The viscosities for both the cholesteric and smectic mesophases are prominently non-Newtonian with a sharp transition between the two. This is the first time a change in rheology has been reported at a smectic-cholesteric transition. A prominent viscosity maximum is observed near the cholesteric-isotropic transition which depends on shear rate and perhaps on time of shearing.
This volume contains papers presented at the Second Symposium on Ordered Fluids and Liquid Crystals held at the 158th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, New York, Sep tember, 1969. The Symposium ...
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ISBN:
(数字)9781468482140
ISBN:
(纸本)9781468482164
This volume contains papers presented at the Second Symposium on Ordered Fluids and Liquid Crystals held at the 158th National Meeting of the American Chemical Society, New York, Sep tember, 1969. The Symposium was sponsored by the Division of Colloid and Surface Chemistry. The proceedings for the first symposium on this subject were published by the American Chemical Society in the Advances in Chemistry Series. In the preface to the volume for the first meet ing held four years ago, we noted that research on liquid crystals had gone through tremendous fluctuations, with peaks of activity around 1900 and again in the early 1930's. The present period of high activity which started about 1960 has continued to exhibit acceleration. The reason for the persistent growth in the field is due to the increasing recognition of the important role played by liquid crystals in both biological systems and in items of commerce as diverse as detergents and electronic components. Addi tionally, more powerful and sophisticated instrumentation is pro viding a basis for understanding the properties of the liquid crystalline state as weIl as yielding inc~s~ve tests for the theories of mesophase structure which are only now reaching astate of maturity. Julian F. Johnson Roger S. Porter v CONTENTS Thermal Phase Transitions in Biomembranes • . • • • • • . • • 1 Joseph M. Steim Conditions of Stability for Liquid-Crystalline Phospholipid Membranes .
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