Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Drawn semi-crystalline polymers are the strongest polymeric materials due to the stress-induced ordering of the molecular chains. [27] Other defects, such as voids, occur in the semi-crystalline polymer under tensile stress and can drive the formation of the neck. The voids can be observed via small angle x-ray scattering.
All polymers (amorphous or semi-crystalline) go through glass transitions. The glass-transition temperature ( T g ) is a crucial physical parameter for polymer manufacturing, processing, and use. Below T g , molecular motions are frozen and polymers are brittle and glassy.
Then the effect on semi-crystalline and amorphous polymers must be distinguished. In both cases, anchor points must be created that act as "triggers" for the effect. In the case of amorphous polymers, these will be the knots or "tangles" of the chains, and in the case of semi-crystalline polymers, the crystals themselves will form these anchor ...
Polyamorphism is also an important area in pharmaceutical science. The amorphous form of a drug typically has much better aqueous solubility (compared to the analogous crystalline form) but the actual local structure in an amorphous pharmaceutical can be different, depending on the method used to form the amorphous phase.
In polymer physics, spherulites (from Greek sphaira = ball and lithos = stone) are spherical semicrystalline regions inside non-branched linear polymers. Their formation is associated with crystallization of polymers from the melt and is controlled by several parameters such as the number of nucleation sites, structure of the polymer molecules, cooling rate, etc. Depending on those parameters ...
Depending on its processing and thermal history, polyethylene terephthalate may exist both as an amorphous (transparent) and as a semi-crystalline polymer. The semicrystalline material might appear transparent (particle size less than 500 nm ) or opaque and white (particle size up to a few micrometers ) depending on its crystal structure and ...
In condensed matter physics and materials science, an amorphous solid (or non-crystalline solid) is a solid that lacks the long-range order that is characteristic of a crystal. The terms " glass " and "glassy solid" are sometimes used synonymously with amorphous solid; however, these terms refer specifically to amorphous materials that undergo ...
Amorphous materials, such as liquids and glasses, represent an intermediate case, having order over short distances (a few atomic or molecular spacings) but not over longer distances. Many materials, such as glass-ceramics and some polymers , can be prepared in such a way as to produce a mixture of crystalline and amorphous regions.