Several commercial and noncommercial, high- and low-density and ultraoriented polyethylene samples, as well as polyethylene samples with inorganic fillers, have been investigated by inversion-recovery cross-polarization magic angle spinning carbon-13 nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR). In all these samples two types of all-trans chains in orthorhombic crystalline domains are detected, which give two overlapping carbon-13 lines with different line widths and different relaxation times. From the NMR relaxation parameters we conclude that one type of the crystalline chains, which composes 60-90% of the crystalline fraction in all samples, can execute at room temperature 180 degrees flips with a frequency in the kilohertz domain. The other crystalline chains are more rigid and probably are found in more perfect structures in which such chain flips do not occur or occur on a much slower time scale. Adding kaoline filler particles to polyethylene enhances the contribution of the more mobile crystalline chains. The presence of the two distinctly different types of crystalline environments is found in all polyethylene samples investigated so far (more than 25 samples).
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