(553a) Key Signatures of the Linear Relaxation Behavior of Glass Forming Polymers and Small Molecules
AIChE Annual Meeting
2020
2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
Polymer Viscoelasticity: Mechanics, Processing, and Rheology I
Wednesday, November 18, 2020 - 8:00am to 8:15am
With respect to linear viscoelastic data, the relaxation spectra is typically determined from master curves developed via time-temperature superposition of isotherms with a limited frequency/time range, where time-temperature superposition implicitly implies that the material is thermo-rheologically simple. determined from the master curve. In contrast, broadband dielectric data covers a much wider frequency range where it is clear that glass forming materials are thermo-rheologically complex. The individual dielectric isotherms are typically fit by a combination of empirical spectral functions, e.g. KWW, Cole-Cole, etc., where the parameters in these empirical functions change with temperature, sometimes nonmonotonically, indicating that this procedure is a curve fit. The traditional determination of the spectra from relaxation data implicitly assumes a constant spectral density, i.e. a uniform spacing for discrete spectra, where the intensity of the individual spectral elements change by orders-of-magnitude in order to describe the relaxation data. Alternatively, it is mathematically equivalent to assume that the individual spectral elements have constant intensity, where the spectral density changes by orders-of-magnitude in order to describe the data. Using this second method, thermo-rheological complexity is readily accommodated, since there is no requirement that all spectra elements have the same temperature dependence as required in time-temperature superposition. This new spectral analysis method has been applied to both polymers and small molecules, where the features of the alpha, excess wing and the sub-Tg gamma processes are exposed. The implications of this new, more physically realistic way of looking at the linear relaxation in glass forming materials will be discussed.