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- 2005 Annual Meeting
- Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
- Cure and Degradation of Thermosetting Polymer Systems
- (598b) Kinetic Modeling of the Effect of Structural Heterogeneities on Polymer Degradation
To understand the effect of weak link heterogeneities quantitatively, we have developed a mechanistic model for the pyrolysis of polystyrene with peroxide bonds as model weak links. The model uses the method of moments to track polymeric species, which are divided based on key structural elements. These include primary carbon, secondary carbon and oxygen end groups, unsaturated moieties (carbon-carbon double bonds and carbonyl groups), and radical position (mid-chain, end-chain, or non-radical species). Low molecular weight species and radicals are tracked explicitly. Elementary reaction types were used to create the terms in the balance equations for each species. Reaction types include (1) chain fission (2) radical recombination (3) hydrogen abstraction (4) mid-chain beta-scission (5) radical addition (6) end-chain beta-scission (7) hydrogen shift and (8) disproportionation. Structure-reactivity relationships were used to link kinetic parameters to the structure and thermodynamics of the reactants and products. The model contains 162 species and tens of thousands of reactions. A broad range of initial peroxide bond concentrations were explored, allowing systems ranging from pure polystyrene to pure poly(styrene peroxide) to be examined, and the results were compared to limited experimental data. The model provided new insights into the effect of weak links on polymer degradation and helped to explain disparate experimental results in the literature.