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  2. Crystallization of polymers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallization_of_polymers

    Crystalline polymers are usually opaque because of light scattering on the numerous boundaries between the crystalline and amorphous regions. The density of such boundaries is lower in polymers with very low crystallinity (amorphous polymer) or very high degree of crystalline polymers, consequentially, the transparency is higher. [5]

  3. Strain crystallization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Strain_crystallization

    Strain crystallization occurs when the chains of molecules in a material become ordered during deformation activities in some polymers and elastomers. [2] The three primary factors that affect strain crystallization are the molecular structure of the polymer or elastomer, the temperature, and the deformation being applied to the material. [3]

  4. Liquid-crystal polymer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liquid-crystal_polymer

    Liquid crystal polymers (LCPs) are polymers with the property of liquid crystal, usually containing aromatic rings as mesogens. Despite uncrosslinked LCPs, polymeric materials like liquid crystal elastomers (LCEs) [ 1 ] and liquid crystal networks (LCNs) can exhibit liquid crystallinity as well.

  5. Polymer characterization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer_characterization

    For crystalline or semicrystalline polymers, anisotropy plays a large role in the mechanical properties of the polymer. [7] The crystallinity of the polymer can be measured through differential scanning calorimetry. [8] For amorphous and semicrystalline polymers, as stress is applied, the polymer chains are able to disentangle and align.

  6. Crystallinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallinity

    Crystallinity refers to the degree of structural order in a solid. In a crystal, the atoms or molecules are arranged in a regular, periodic manner. The degree of crystallinity has a large influence on hardness, density, transparency and diffusion. In an ideal gas, the relative positions of the atoms or molecules are completely random.

  7. Polymer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polymer

    Polymer nomenclature is generally based upon the type of monomer residues comprising the polymer. A polymer which contains only a single type of repeat unit is known as a homopolymer, while a polymer containing two or more types of repeat units is known as a copolymer. [22] A terpolymer is a copolymer which contains three types of repeat units ...

  8. Spherulite (polymer physics) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spherulite_(polymer_physics)

    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 ...

  9. Crystallization - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crystallization

    Attributes of the resulting crystal depend largely on factors such as temperature, air pressure, cooling rate, and in the case of liquid crystals, time of fluid evaporation. Crystallization occurs in two major steps. The first is nucleation, the appearance of a crystalline phase from either a supercooled liquid or a supersaturated solvent.