Morphological changes in thermoplastic polyurethanes during heating

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Abstract

This work investigated the thermal behavior of a series of thermoplastic poly(ether-urethane)s containing 36-71% by weight hard segments derived from 4,4′-methylene-bisphenylisocyanate and butane-l,4-diol, with poly(tetramethylene oxide) soft segments. In all materials studied, differential scanning calorimetry revealed the presence of a T1 endotherm ∼20-30°C above the annealing temperature. Morphological changes during heating were observed using small-angle X-ray scattering; the data was analyzed using "globular" models based on a one-dimensional statistical lattice or the Percus-Yevick description of liquids, both of which appeared to provide good descriptions of these materials. The results indicated that the T 1 endotherm coincided with the onset of morphological changes during heating. Possible explanations are discussed, based on the melting of small hard-segment crystals or an activation energy associated with transient segmental mixing. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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APA

Laity, P. R., Taylor, J. E., Wong, S. S., Khunkamchoo, P., Cable, M., Andrews, G. T., … Cameron, R. E. (2006). Morphological changes in thermoplastic polyurethanes during heating. Journal of Applied Polymer Science, 100(1), 779–790. https://doi.org/10.1002/app.22644

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