A Quantitative Study on Branching Density Dependent Behavior of Polylactide Melt Strength

Macromol Rapid Commun. 2023 Mar;44(6):e2200858. doi: 10.1002/marc.202200858. Epub 2023 Feb 7.

Abstract

Polymer melt strength (MS) is strongly correlated with its molecular structure, while their relationship is not very clear yet. In this work, designable long-chain branched polylactide (LCB-PLA) is prepared in situ by using a tailor-made (methyl methacrylate)-co-(glycidyl methacrylate) copolymer (MG) with accurate number of reactive sites. A new concept of branching density (φ) in the LCB-PLA system is defined to quantitively study their relationship. Importantly, a critical point of φc = 5.5 mol/104 mol C is revealed for the first time, below which the zero-shear viscosity (η0 ) corresponding to MS increases slowly with a slope of Δη0 /Δφ = 1400, while it increases sharply above this critical point due to entanglement of neighboring LCB-PLA chains. Consequently, the MS of PLA increased by >100 times by optimizing the LCB structures while maintaining processibility. Therefore, this work provides a deeper understanding and feasible route in quantitative design of polymers with high(er) melt strength for some specialty applications.

Keywords: foaming performances; long chain branching; melt strength; polylactide; rheological behaviors.

MeSH terms

  • Molecular Structure
  • Polyesters* / chemistry
  • Polymers* / chemistry

Substances

  • poly(lactide)
  • Polyesters
  • Polymers