A theory is presented for the interpretation of NMR spectra of copolycondensates, with special attention to those obtained by melt mixing of two macromol. chains (reactive blending). The repeat unit is split into two parts, referred to as half-monomers. The present theory gives a highly accurate description of the changes in the sequence distribution during the reactive blending reaction, since the effect of the first and second neighbors along the macromol. backbone (half-monomer penultimate effect) is explicitly considered. The theor. predictions are compared with exptl. data taken from the literature and, more specifically, NMR data concerning five copolymer systems, namely, a copolymer obtained by reactive blending of poly(ethylene terephthalate) and poly(ethylene adipate), an almost alternating copolymer with units of ether-sulfone and ether-ketone, a copolymer derived from 6-methyl-2,5-morpholinedione, and two copolymers obtained by reactive blending of poly(butylene terephthalate) with poly(bisphenol-A carbonate) and Nylon 6.
Is It Possible to Extend the Coleman-Fox Method for Polymer Sequence Determination by NMR to Copolycondensates?
2004
Abstract
A theory is presented for the interpretation of NMR spectra of copolycondensates, with special attention to those obtained by melt mixing of two macromol. chains (reactive blending). The repeat unit is split into two parts, referred to as half-monomers. The present theory gives a highly accurate description of the changes in the sequence distribution during the reactive blending reaction, since the effect of the first and second neighbors along the macromol. backbone (half-monomer penultimate effect) is explicitly considered. The theor. predictions are compared with exptl. data taken from the literature and, more specifically, NMR data concerning five copolymer systems, namely, a copolymer obtained by reactive blending of poly(ethylene terephthalate) and poly(ethylene adipate), an almost alternating copolymer with units of ether-sulfone and ether-ketone, a copolymer derived from 6-methyl-2,5-morpholinedione, and two copolymers obtained by reactive blending of poly(butylene terephthalate) with poly(bisphenol-A carbonate) and Nylon 6.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.