Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
5207961 | Progress in Polymer Science | 2016 | 198 Pages |
Abstract
Polymer crystals in which chain helices all have the same sense show banded spherulites, as do crystals in which the chain axes are not perpendicular to the basal surfaces. Recent analyses with optical birefringence and X-ray micro-diffraction support the presence of helicoidally twisted ribbons, although other structural arrangements have sometimes been revealed by microscopy. Assessments of twist directions in spherulites of chiral polymers point to unbalanced basal surface stress as the source of twisting, although a general mechanical analysis is lacking. Another twisting model employs regular arrays of isochiral giant screw dislocations; results are mixed for this model.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
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Authors
Buckley Crist, Jerold M. Schultz,