Big Chemical Encyclopedia

Chemical substances, components, reactions, process design ...

Articles Figures Tables About

Highly aromatic ester-based main-chain

Highly aromatic ester-based main-chain TLCP s are useful because of their high strength and modulus, and processability. A limiting factor in the use of these Ar-TLCFs as a reinforcement with commercially available thermoplastic polymers is their incompatibility, as expressed by poor interfacial adhesion [1,4,13,14]. This could be overcome by the utilizing intermediary phases as compatibilizers [5,//]. A binary-TLCP blend can provide for this. [Pg.71]

Completely rigid rod-like molecules such as poly(4-oxybenzoyl) or poly( p-phenylene terephthalate) tend to be highly crystalline and intractable, with melting points above the decomposition temperature of the polymers (>450°C). The problem of thermotropic MCLCP design is to disrupt the regularity of the intractable para-linked aromatic polymers to the point at which mesomorphic behaviour is manifested below the decomposition temperature and the materials can be processed in fluid yet ordered states. The disruption must not, however, be taken to the stage where conventional isotropic fluid behaviour is preferred. These requirements that the polymer must retain some rod-like nature but at the same time be melt-processable below 400-450°C have limited thermotropic MCLCPs mainly to polymers based on the linear ester or ester/amide bonds. With polyester/ polyesteramides, disruption is normally achieved by the th ee copolymerization techniques outlined in Fig. 8.1, i.e. frustrated chain packing, flexible spacers and non-linear links. [Pg.408]


See other pages where Highly aromatic ester-based main-chain is mentioned: [Pg.144]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.9]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.13]    [Pg.307]    [Pg.528]    [Pg.305]    [Pg.507]    [Pg.205]    [Pg.36]   


SEARCH



Aromatic esters

Base chains

Bases. esters

Ester-based

Main aromatic

Main-chain

© 2024 chempedia.info