Journal
MACROMOLECULES
Volume 53, Issue 12, Pages 4863-4873Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.0c00005
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Funding
- National Natural Science Foundation of China [21704102, 51525305]
- Newton Advanced Fellowship of the Royal Society, United Kingdom [NA 150222]
- ExxonMobil
- EPSRC [EP/L027011/1] Funding Source: UKRI
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Cavitation is an important phenomenon in solid- phase deformation of polymers, which either has potential adverse a effects on physical properties or creates potential opportunities for new properties. In either case, it needs to be better understood to help achieve better control of cavitation and its effects. Cavitation associated with solid-phase deformation in a beta-nucleated isotactic polypropylene was found to depend on the solid-phase deformation route employed. Compared with samples obtained by free tensile stretching, cavitation was suppressed in samples deformed via die-drawing, although an almost identical beta- to alpha-phase transition was observed for both deformation routes. Even when die-drawn samples were subsequently deformed to large strains by free stretching, there was still no comparable cavitation compared with the single free tensile-stretching route. The die-drawing process appears to suppress cavitation by fundamentally diminishing the number of growable nuclei of cavities, rather than merely hindering the growth of cavities. A relationship between cavitation intensity and the fractions of lamellae along specific directions has been established. During subsequent free stretching of die-drawn samples, newly created cavities were suggested to be initiated within the crystalline layers. The reduction of the cavity nuclei in the die-drawing process originated from the stabilization of the connections between the crystalline blocks within the lamellae.
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