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Analysis of melt copolymers Maurizio S. Montaudo Institute of
Chemistry and Technology of Polymers, CNR, Viale A. Doria 6, 95125 Catania, Italy. E-mail: mmontaudo@unict.it
ABSTRACT:
Melt copolymer chains are the main (most abundant)
reaction product obtained when heating a blend of two (or more) condensation polymers (such as polyester + polycarbonate or polyester + polyamide or polyester + polyester) in
which exchange reactions occur. In fact, during the melt-mixing reaction, an AB copolymer is formed and, as a consequence, the sample is a complex mixture made of three
components or simply “parts”, referred to as Z1, Z2 and Z3, where Z1 and Z2 are the parts for unreacted homopolymers (A and B), whereas Z3 is the part for
the copolymer. In this paper, it is shown that matrix-assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectrometry (and mass spectrometry in general) can be used to monitor the yield of
the reactive blending reaction, YR, by measuring the amount of unreacted homopolymer (Z1 and Z2). In order to allow for comparisons, the paper also discusses
conventional methods for measuring Z1 and Z2, such as liquid chromatography and nuclear magnetic resonance.
Keywords:
MALDI, polycarbonate, polyester, Nylon, reactive blending,
randomness, block copolymer
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