Journal
CRYSTAL GROWTH & DESIGN
Volume 22, Issue 1, Pages 441-448Publisher
AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.cgd.1c01069
Keywords
-
Funding
- JSPS KAKENHI [JP17K05993]
Ask authors/readers for more resources
By combining the nonequilibrium nature of a polymeric material and a rapid temperature-jump technique, a polymer crystallite with a ring-like morphology was obtained, and the phenomenon of melting point inversion was observed.
A polymer crystallite having a ring-like morphology was obtained by combining the nonequilibrium nature of a polymeric material and a rapid temperature-jump technique. Termed ring-lite here, it consists of the concentrically arranged crystalline and molten regions of a single-component polymer. During the growing process of a spherulite, crystallization temperature T-c was, in turn, changed between low and high temperatures at certain intervals. In this way, bimodal melting temperatures T-m due to the Gibbs-Thomson effect were alternately imprinted within an identical spherulite. Subsequently, the sample was heated so rapidly that only the region having higher T-m remained in a crystalline state. Importantly, inversion of the melting point was also microscopically visualized as a dark-ring. Contrary to the appearance of ring-lites due to the normal Gibbs-Thomson effect, we found that a specific heating rate caused the region having originally a lower T(m )to remain in a crystalline state and that with originally a higher T-m to melt, i.e., display inversion of the melting point. The occurrence of the melting point inversion was confirmed by heating rate variation measurements of fast-scan chip calorimetry (FSC).
Authors
I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.
Reviews
Recommended
No Data Available