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Stress relaxation as a microstructural probe for immiscible polymer blends

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Abstract

Relaxation has been investigated in immiscible blends that consist of slightly viscoelastic components. Both the shear and normal stresses have been measured after cessation of steady shear flow as well as after transient shear histories. The latter can generate a fibrillar structure which can relax by either retraction or break-up via end-pinching or Rayleigh instabilities. Each of these three relaxation mechanisms is reflected in the shape of the stress curves, from which also the corresponding structural time scales can be deduced. The experimental results have been used to evaluate the Doi-Ohta and Lee-Park models for immiscible blends. The scaling relations by Doi-Ohta are confirmed by the experimental results, but none of the existing models can correctly predict the complex relaxation behaviour observed for a highly deformed droplet phase. In the present study an alternative approach has been proposed. The stress relaxation due to fibril break-up via Rayleigh instabilities has been predicted successfully by combining physical models for the structural changes with the basic approach of the Doi-Ohta model.

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Correspondence to Paula Moldenaers.

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Vinckier, I., Mewis, J. & Moldenaers, P. Stress relaxation as a microstructural probe for immiscible polymer blends. Rheol Acta 36, 513–523 (1997). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00368129

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF00368129

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