Several polymers were modified with multiwalled carbon nanotubes (CNT) to study the influences of the crystallization in the polymeric matrix and of the CNT orientation during extrusion on the electrical conductivity. Experiments were carried out with common semi-crystalline polymers (polypropylene, polyethylene, polyamide 6) and compared to an amorphous polymer (ethylene vinyl acetate). All polymers were grades with low viscosity, so that the CNT could be oriented well during extrusion. For all materials, the percolation threshold was determined, and the lowest value of 3% was found in polypropylene. The percolation threshold was correlated to the degree of crystallinity of the matrix polymers, so that crystallites could be seen as an excluded volume for CNT. The crystallization itself was analyzed by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), whereby nucleation effects and changes in the crystallization temperature were found. The shear rate during extrusion had a large influence on the electrical conductivity. This effect was analyzed by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), with which the orientation of CNT in the direction of extrusion was visualized and differences between the polymer matrices were explained.
Abstract:The structural properties of novel melt-spun polymer optical fibers (POFs) are investigated by small-angle X-ray scattering. The amorphous PMMA POFs were subjected to a rapid cooling in a water quench right after extrusion in order to obtain a radial refractive index profile. Four fiber samples were investigated with small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS). The resulting distance-distribution functions obtained from the respective equatorial and meridional SAXS data exhibit a real-space correlation peak indicative of periodic cross-sectional and axial variations in the scattering density contrast. Simple model calculations demonstrate how the structural information contained particularly in the equatorial distance distribution function can be interpreted. The respective results are qualitatively verified for one of the fiber samples by comparison of the model curve with the measured SAXS data. Eventually, the study confirms that the cross-sectional variation of the (scattering-) density is the main reason for the formation of radial refractive-index profiles in the POFs.
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