https://doi.org/10.1140/epje/i2004-10094-0
Kinetics of microphase separation in interpenetrated polymer networks in solution
Laboratoire de Physique des Polymères et Phénomènes Critiques, Faculté des Sciences Ben M’sik, B.P. 7955, Casablanca, Morocco
* e-mail: m.benhamou@univh2m.ac.ma
Received:
20
August
2004
Accepted:
15
January
2005
Published online:
9
March
2005
We present here a theoretical study of the early kinetics of the microphase separation in crosslinked polymer blends, made of two incompatible polymers A and B, dissolved in a common good solvent. Use is made of an extended blob model used previously for the investigation of the static properties of such a transition. We are interested in the variation of the relaxation rate, , versus the wave number q, in the vicinity of the spinodal temperature. We first show that kinetics is entirely dominated by local motions, which are of Rouse type. Slow motions are absent, because of the permanent presence of crosslinks. Second, we find that the characteristic frequency,
(q ) =
, increases with increasing wave number q according to a sixth power law, that is
(q )
q
6φ{-9/4}, where φ is the overall monomer volume fraction. Therefore, the swelling of strands due to the excluded-volume forces leads to a renormalization of the characteristic frequency by a multiplicative factor scaling as φ{-9/4}. The main conclusion is that the presence of a good solvent necessitates relaxation rates less important than those relative to crosslinked mixtures in the molten state.
PACS: 61.25.Hq Macromolecular and polymer solutions; polymer melts; swelling – / 64.75.+g Solubility, segregation, and mixing; phase separation – / 82.70.Gg Gels and sols –
© EDP Sciences, Società Italiana di Fisica and Springer-Verlag, 2005