The physical properties, crystallization, and spherulite growth behavior and mechanism of linear and 3-arm poly(L-lactide) [i.e., poly(L-lactic acid) (PLLA)] have been investigated using absolute molecular weight as a molecular index. The branching reduces the chain mobility of PLLA and must be excluded from the crystalline regions. The former factor gives the higher glass transition temperature (T(g)) and starting temperature for thermal degradation (T(d,S)) of 3-arm PLLA compared with those of linear PLLA. On the other hand, both the former and the latter factors lead to the higher cold crystallization temperature (T(cc)), the longer induction period for spherulite growth (t(i)), the lower melting temperature (T(m)), crystallinitiy (X(c)), and radius growth rate of the spherulties (G) for the 3-arm PLLA compared with those for the linear PLLA. The G of 3-arm PLLA showed the vague dependence on number-average molecular weight (M(n)), probably because the branching effect was balanced with the molecular weight effect. At the M(n) exceeding critical values, the linear and 3-arm PLLA crystallize in regime II or regime III kinetics, depending on crystallization temperature (T(c)). In contrast, at the M(n) below critical values, the linear and 3-arm PLLA crystallize according solely to regime III and regime II kinetics, respectively, for all the T(c).
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