Title: Analysis of Materials Polymers by Thermal Methods:
1- Analysis of Materials (Polymers) by Thermal
Methods - DSC, TG/DTA
- Instructor Ioan I. Negulescu
- CHEM 4010
- Tuesday,
- October 29, 2002
2- Thermal Methods
- Thermal methods are based upon the measurement of
the dynamic relationship between temperature and
some property of the system such as mass and heat
absorbed or evolved by/from it.
3- Differential Scanning Calorimetry,
- DSC
- Differential Thermal Analysis,
- DTA
- Thermogravimetry,
- TG
- are the most important thermal methods
- used in characterization of polymers.
4- The temperature increase, ?T, of a body which is
heated is directly proportional to the amount of
heat absorbed, ?Q, and inversely proportional to
its mass, m, and its capacity C to store heat - ?T ?Q/m C Eq. 1
5- Consider the temperature increase of two
different samples of the same mass - m1 m2
- for which the same amount of heat was given
- ?Q1 ?Q2
- If their heat capacities are different
- C1 ? C2
- they do not experience the same temperature
increase, i.e., - ?T1 ? ?T2
6- A greater heat flow (dQ/dt, where t is time)
- will always flow into the sample whose heat
capacity is higher, in order that the
steady-state heating rate be maintained. - The heat capacity at constant pressure (Cp)
- of a material is defined as the temperature
increase of a unit of substance (mass) as a
result of the supply of a unit of heat at - constant pressure.
7- For the same substance, Cp is dependent upon its
aggregation state, i.e., it is different for the
liquid state as compared to loose gaseous or to
more compact solid state.
8- A polymeric material has different heat
capacities for amorphous or crystalline
morphologies. For amorphous polymers, the heat
capacity for the glassy state (i.e., below glass
transition, Tg, where only vibrations of atomic
groups occur) is different from that
characterizing the leathery (short range
diffusional motion, i.e., of chain segments),
rubbery (retarded long-range motions), rubbery
flow (slippage of long-range entanglements) or
liquid state.
9- Figure 1. Temperature - molecular mass diagram
for amorphous polymers (1) Glass transition
(Tg) (2) Diffuse transition zone and (3)
Thermal decomposition.
10- Figure 2. Temperature - Molecular Mass diagram
for (semi) -crystalline polymers (1) Glass
transition (Tg) (2) Melting point (Tm) (3)
Diffuse transition zone and (4) Thermal
decomposition.
11- For amorphous polymers, the glass-rubber
transition temperature is of considerable
importance technologically. It (Tg) determines
the lower use limit of a rubber (e.g.,
polydienes, Tg ? -50C) and the upper limit use
of an amorphous thermoplastic material(e.g.,
polystyrene, Tg ? 100 C).
12- In the case of (semicrystalline) linear polymers
it is possible to identify a melting temperature
(Tm). Above this temperature the polymer may be
liquid, viscoelastic or rubbery according to its
molecular mass, but below it, at least in the
high molecular mass range, it will tend to be
leathery and tough down to the glass transition
temperature.
13 POLYHYDROXYALKANOATES
R can be hydrogen or hydrocarbon chains of
up to around C13 in length, and x can range
from 1 to 3 or more. Varying x and R
effect hydrophobicity, Tg, Tm, and level of
crystallinity
14POLYHYDROXYALKANOATES
15- Detailed information on glass transition,
crystallization, and melting, is therefore
critically important in formation, processing and
utilization of polymers. - Differential thermal methods (DTA and DSC) have
been widely applied to the study and
characterization of polymeric materials.
16- In DTA the heat absorbed or emitted by a system
is observed by measuring the temperature
difference (?T) between that system (the sample)
and an inert reference material (often alumina),
as the temperature of both is increased at a
constant rate (usually 5-10 ?C/min).
17- Figure 3. Schematic diagram of a typical DTA
apparatus.
18- In DSC, the sample and the reference are also
subjected to a continuously increasing or
decreasing temperature. - In the scanning operation the sample and the
reference show different temperature independent
heat capacities. - Heat (dQ/dt) is added to the sample or to the
reference as necessary to maintain the two
identical temperatures.
19- Bottom (b) measured curve. ?m is the measured
heat flux. ?bl is the heat flux corresponding to
the base line and t is time.
20- The ordinate is usually represented by the
heat flux (denominated as ? or dQ/dt) or by the
variation of the heat capacity. - The glass-to-rubber transition, or shortly
the glass transition (Tg) is a phase change
reminiscent of a thermodynamic second order
transition (melting and crystallization being
first order transitions) for which a plot of
specific heat versus temperature shows a sudden
jump. - The first order transitions appear
- as peaks.
21- DSC curve of a polymeric sample (1), (3) and (5)
are base lines (2) is glass-to-rubber
transition, Tg (4) is the interpolated base
line and (6) is the first order transition peak.
22- The glass transition region in cooling (a) and
subsequent heating (b) mode showing some commonly
used definitions of glass transition, Tg.
23Poly(Lactic Acid)
- --O-CH(CH3)-CO-n
- Two of the most attractive features of
- poly(lactic acid), PLA, polymers are
- they are easily synthesized from
- renewable resources (corn!)
- they are both hydro- and biodegradable
24Poly (Lactic Acid) Glass transition temperature,
Tg.
25- DSC traces for melting and crystallization
- of a polymer sample.
26- Melting of polyoxymethylene with superheating.
27- DSC analysis of a poly(ethylene terephthalate)
sample quenched from the melt.
28DSC traces of Low Crystallinity PLA treated in
Water at 70?C and 100?C. The higher the
crystallinity achievedat 100 ?C, the higher and
the less defined the Tg
29- Melting of two semicrystalline HDPE samples.
30- Considering ?H 200 mJ/mg as the enthalpic
change for the melting of a 100 crystalline HDPE
sample, from DSC data of these two recyclable
HDPE it can be found that - the polymer derived from detergent bottles was
(132/200)x100 66 crystalline - the polymer used for milk bottles was
(165/200)x100 82.5 crystalline.
31- Determination of the HDPE content in a blend with
inorganic filler from DSC data.
32Polyhydroxylated Nylons Similarity of Nylon 6,6
and the poly hydroxylated counterpart
33DSC Thermal Transitions in Polyhydroxylated
Nylon 6,6
34- Thermogravimetric (TG) analysis is concerned with
the change in weight of a material as its
temperature changes. This indicates - the temperature at which the material loses
weight through evaporation or decomposition -
- the temperature at which no weight loss takes
place is revealed, which indicates stability of
the material.
35- TG Measurement Principle of Seiko TG/DTA
Thermobalance
36Thermal Degradation of Polyhydroxylated Nylon
6,6
37Poly (4-dodecyl-1-4-aza heptamethylene-D-glucarami
de). Thermal
decomposition.
38- Initial decomposition of linear polymers.
- Initial sample weight 10 mg. Heating rate
5?C/min.
39- Thermogravimetric analysis of a polymeric blend
containing HDPE and an inorganic filler
(phosphogypsum)
40- Almost any measurement that can be done at
different temperatures can be expanded into
thermal analysis and any series of thermal
analysis techniques can be combined with other
non-thermal technique for valuable
multiple-parameter information.
41- Coupled techniques, such as Thermogravimetry,
Differential Thermal Analysis and Mass
Spectrometry (TG-DTA-MS) or evolved gas analysis
of polymers by coupled Thermogravimetry, Gas
Chromatography, Fourier Transform Infrared and
Mass Spectrometry (TG-GC-FTIR-MS) are just two
examples often used in industrial laboratories.