Highly faceted, regular, lathlike lamellar single crystals of
syndiotactic polypropylene (s-PP) fractions have been investigated through transmission electron
microscopy (TEM), atomic force
microscopy (AFM), and electron diffraction (ED). Single crystals
of s-PP over 1 μm in size can be grown
from the melt in thin films. ED results obtained from the s-PP
single crystals indicate a unit cell III
with a = 1.450 nm, b = 1.120 nm, and c
= 0.740 nm as proposed by Lovinger and Lotz. At
high
crystallization temperatures, relatively low molecular weight s-PP
fractions can grow lamellar single
crystals with microsectors. The polyethylene decoration method has
been used to identify the chain folding
direction, and no preferred orientation has been observed on the
nonsectorized lamellar crystals.
Sectorized lamellar single crystals show two different regions.
In the sectors along the long axis (the
b-axis), the chain folding is found to be parallel to the
010 direction. In the sectors along the short axis
(the a-axis), little preferred orientation can be found.
The deformation method of nonsectorized, high
molecular weight s-PP single crystals on a plastic film has also been
utilized to determine the chain
folding direction. Microfibrillar structures can be observed in
the cracks of the single crystals along both
the a- and b-axes after deformation. This
indicates that the folding direction in these
nonsectorized,
high molecular weight s-PP single crystals may be either along the
(110) planes or a combination of the
(100) and (010) microfolding and microsectoring. Zigzag-shaped
edges on the deformed single crystals
along the a-axis are also observed, and the sliding planes
can be identified as the (110) planes.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.