Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability

Two ethylene-octene copolymers (EOC) with the same melt flow index (MFI = 3 g/10 min) but different octene contents, being 20 and 35 wt % (EOC-20 and EOC-35), were compared with regard to sensitivity to electron beam crosslinking. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) revealed a large influence of the o...

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Main Author: Petr Svoboda
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2015-12-01
Series:Polymers
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/7/12/1530
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spelling doaj-54a1dc9e150d4533b321387b7a271f982020-11-24T22:43:09ZengMDPI AGPolymers2073-43602015-12-017122522253410.3390/polym7121530polym7121530Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam CrosslinkabilityPetr Svoboda0Department of Polymer Engineering, Faculty of Technology, Tomas Bata University in Zlin, Vavreckova 275, 762 72 Zlin, Czech RepublicTwo ethylene-octene copolymers (EOC) with the same melt flow index (MFI = 3 g/10 min) but different octene contents, being 20 and 35 wt % (EOC-20 and EOC-35), were compared with regard to sensitivity to electron beam crosslinking. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) revealed a large influence of the octene content on the storage modulus and the glass transition temperature (Tg) but a smaller influence of irradiation on the properties below melting point (Tm). Rheology at 150 °C pointed out large differences in samples crosslinked in the 0–60 kGy range and at lower frequencies (0.1–1 Hz). The loss factor tanδ confirmed that before irradiation the two copolymers were very similar, while after irradiation to 120 kGy, the EOC-35 had considerably lower tanδ than EOC-20, which corresponds to a better elasticity (or a higher level of crosslinking). A high-temperature creep test showed a considerably lower creep for EOC with a higher octene content. An analysis of the insoluble gel content exhibited higher values for EOC-35 confirming a higher level of crosslinking. Analysis according to the Charlesby-Pinner equation revealed increased crosslinking-to-scission ratio, G(X)/G(S), for EOC-35. While the G(X) value changed only slightly, a significant decrease in the G(S) value was discovered.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/7/12/1530ethylene-octene copolymerelectron beam irradiationcrosslinkingrheologycreep
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Petr Svoboda
spellingShingle Petr Svoboda
Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
Polymers
ethylene-octene copolymer
electron beam irradiation
crosslinking
rheology
creep
author_facet Petr Svoboda
author_sort Petr Svoboda
title Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
title_short Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
title_full Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
title_fullStr Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
title_full_unstemmed Influence of Branching Density in Ethylene-Octene Copolymers on Electron Beam Crosslinkability
title_sort influence of branching density in ethylene-octene copolymers on electron beam crosslinkability
publisher MDPI AG
series Polymers
issn 2073-4360
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Two ethylene-octene copolymers (EOC) with the same melt flow index (MFI = 3 g/10 min) but different octene contents, being 20 and 35 wt % (EOC-20 and EOC-35), were compared with regard to sensitivity to electron beam crosslinking. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) revealed a large influence of the octene content on the storage modulus and the glass transition temperature (Tg) but a smaller influence of irradiation on the properties below melting point (Tm). Rheology at 150 °C pointed out large differences in samples crosslinked in the 0–60 kGy range and at lower frequencies (0.1–1 Hz). The loss factor tanδ confirmed that before irradiation the two copolymers were very similar, while after irradiation to 120 kGy, the EOC-35 had considerably lower tanδ than EOC-20, which corresponds to a better elasticity (or a higher level of crosslinking). A high-temperature creep test showed a considerably lower creep for EOC with a higher octene content. An analysis of the insoluble gel content exhibited higher values for EOC-35 confirming a higher level of crosslinking. Analysis according to the Charlesby-Pinner equation revealed increased crosslinking-to-scission ratio, G(X)/G(S), for EOC-35. While the G(X) value changed only slightly, a significant decrease in the G(S) value was discovered.
topic ethylene-octene copolymer
electron beam irradiation
crosslinking
rheology
creep
url http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/7/12/1530
work_keys_str_mv AT petrsvoboda influenceofbranchingdensityinethyleneoctenecopolymersonelectronbeamcrosslinkability
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