Publication | Open Access
Phase behavior and viscoelastic properties of entangled block copolymer gels
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Citations
32
References
2001
Year
Macromolecular ChemistryEngineeringMechanical EngineeringResponsive PolymersSoft MatterPolymersPolymer MaterialMacromolecular EngineeringPolymer ProcessingRheologyBiophysicsPolymer ChemistryMaterials SciencePlateau ModulusMicellePhase BehaviorStyrene–isoprene–styrene Triblock CopolymerMacromolecular ScienceBlock Co-polymersPolymer ScienceMacromolecular SystemPolymer CharacterizationEntanglement Molecular WeightPolymer Property
Abstract Triblock copolymers in midblock‐selective solvents can form physical gels. However, at low triblock contents (near the percolation threshold), the bridging of chains between micelles can lead to macrophase separation. Adding a styrene–isoprene diblock to a styrene–isoprene–styrene triblock copolymer in squalane can eliminate macrophase separation, yielding a wide range of stable, single‐phase gels with a disordered arrangement of micelles. The plateau modulus of these triblock gels scales with the 2.2 power of polymer content, indicating the importance of entanglements in dictating the modulus. Comparing gels made from the midblock‐saturated derivative of the same polymer [styrene‐(ethylene‐ alt ‐propylene)‐styrene] in squalane reveals that the modulus differences in the gels are a direct consequence of the difference in the entanglement molecular weight of the midblock homopolymer in bulk. Finally, the broad relaxation spectrum of these triblocks is well‐described by a recent theory for the dynamics of entangled star polymers, with the breadth of the relaxation spectrum dictated by the number of entanglements per midblock in the gel. © 2001 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys 39: 2183–2197, 2001
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