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Moisture management of polylactides: The effect of heat treatment
Journal article   Peer reviewed

Moisture management of polylactides: The effect of heat treatment

Donghun Koo, An Du, Giuseppe R. Palmese and Richard A. Cairncross
Polymer (Guilford), v 53(5), pp 1115-1123
28 Feb 2012

Abstract

Physical Sciences Polymer Science Science & Technology
This paper explored how heat treatment affects moisture sorption in amorphous, semi-crystalline and end-capped polylactides. End-group modified polylactide was synthesized by ring-opening polymerization with palmityl alcohol as the initiator and acetic anhydride as the terminating agent. Water sorption in amorphous standard polylactide is insensitive to heat treatment conditions but decreases with increasing molecular weight. Water sorption increases with increasing heat treatment temperature in low molecular weight, semi-crystalline standard polylactide but there is a negligible change with heat treatment conditions in high molecular weight semi-crystalline standard polylactide. Water sorption in standard polylactide is strongly affected by the content of hydrophilic end in amorphous polylactide. In modified semi-crystalline polylactide, water sorption increased with increasing heat treatment temperatures or crystallinity. Water sorption in end-capped polylactide is influenced by morphology including crystallinity, microphase separation and amorphous phase composition produced by heat treatment conditions. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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