A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol

A study of the relation between mechanical properties and molecular weight distribution of polyvinyl alcohol was carried out. The polyvinyl alcohol was fractionated with respect to degree of polymerization (D.P.) by precipitation of the fractions from 2% solution in water with a n-propyl alcohol-w...

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Main Author: Levi, David Winterton
Other Authors: Chemistry
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Polytechnic Institute 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94515
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-945152020-09-26T05:33:04Z A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol Levi, David Winterton Chemistry LD5655.V856 1953.L484 Molecular weights Alcohol A study of the relation between mechanical properties and molecular weight distribution of polyvinyl alcohol was carried out. The polyvinyl alcohol was fractionated with respect to degree of polymerization (D.P.) by precipitation of the fractions from 2% solution in water with a n-propyl alcohol-water nonsolvent. The initial small scale procedure was modified so as to accumulate fractions in sufficient quantity for the testing of mechanical properties and for the preparation of blends. The fractions were refractionated until further refractionation gave no further change in D.P. The homogeneous fractions were cast into films using water as the solvent. These films were then used in determining mechanical properties. A series of three blends, all with normal distributions and the same D.P. at the maximum of the differential distribution curve but with variable heights at the maximum D.P., were prepared and the mechanical properties were determined. A second series of six blends, all with constant height and constant D.P. at the maximum, but all being skewed from the normal distribution, were prepared and their mechanical properties were determined. A correlation of tensile strength with the shape of the distribution curve was found to have the form: T = (8200-l0<sup>6 .87-.00476P<sub>m</sub></sup>) + (2.786 x 10<sup>6</sup>H<sup>4.767</sup>-1000) + (1450-10.4B), Where T is tensile strength; P<sub>m</sub> is D.P. at maximum of the differential distribution curve; H is height at the maximum; B is area skew. The second term in brackets is dropped when H is greater than 0.190 and the entire last term is dropped when B = 0. A graphical correlation of mechanical properties with total percentage of low D.P. material gives fairly good results for polyvinyl alcohol and, using the data of other investigators, for cellulose nitrate, cellulose acetate, and polyvinyl acetate. Ph. D. 2019-10-10T19:27:43Z 2019-10-10T19:27:43Z 1953 Dissertation Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94515 en_US OCLC# 20447427 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ 148 leaves application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Polytechnic Institute
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V856 1953.L484
Molecular weights
Alcohol
spellingShingle LD5655.V856 1953.L484
Molecular weights
Alcohol
Levi, David Winterton
A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
description A study of the relation between mechanical properties and molecular weight distribution of polyvinyl alcohol was carried out. The polyvinyl alcohol was fractionated with respect to degree of polymerization (D.P.) by precipitation of the fractions from 2% solution in water with a n-propyl alcohol-water nonsolvent. The initial small scale procedure was modified so as to accumulate fractions in sufficient quantity for the testing of mechanical properties and for the preparation of blends. The fractions were refractionated until further refractionation gave no further change in D.P. The homogeneous fractions were cast into films using water as the solvent. These films were then used in determining mechanical properties. A series of three blends, all with normal distributions and the same D.P. at the maximum of the differential distribution curve but with variable heights at the maximum D.P., were prepared and the mechanical properties were determined. A second series of six blends, all with constant height and constant D.P. at the maximum, but all being skewed from the normal distribution, were prepared and their mechanical properties were determined. A correlation of tensile strength with the shape of the distribution curve was found to have the form: T = (8200-l0<sup>6 .87-.00476P<sub>m</sub></sup>) + (2.786 x 10<sup>6</sup>H<sup>4.767</sup>-1000) + (1450-10.4B), Where T is tensile strength; P<sub>m</sub> is D.P. at maximum of the differential distribution curve; H is height at the maximum; B is area skew. The second term in brackets is dropped when H is greater than 0.190 and the entire last term is dropped when B = 0. A graphical correlation of mechanical properties with total percentage of low D.P. material gives fairly good results for polyvinyl alcohol and, using the data of other investigators, for cellulose nitrate, cellulose acetate, and polyvinyl acetate. === Ph. D.
author2 Chemistry
author_facet Chemistry
Levi, David Winterton
author Levi, David Winterton
author_sort Levi, David Winterton
title A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
title_short A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
title_full A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
title_fullStr A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
title_full_unstemmed A study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
title_sort study of the relation between molecular weight distribution and mechanical properties of polyvinyl alcohol
publisher Virginia Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/94515
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