Thermodynamic Interactions in Polymer Systems by Gas—Liquid Chromatography. II. Rubber—Hydrocarbons
Abstract The application of gas—liquid chromatography (glc) to the study of thermodynamic interactions in polymeric systems is attractive in its ability to generate data rapidly and to extend these into high polymer concentration ranges which are difficult to study by conventional methods. Several recent publications have shown that glc data can produce thermodynamically meaningful results, our most recent work showing very good agreement in a comparison of thermodynamic interaction parameters calculated from glc and equilibrium sorption data for poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS) interacting with selected hydrocarbons. The demand for accuracy in thermodynamic data is considerable, if, for example, these are to be of use in resolution of varying predictions drawn from theories of solution thermodynamics. It is therefore prudent to extend the test of the rapid method's usefulness by comparing thermodynamic data calculated from conventional equilibrium sorption results and from glc data for additional polymers. The system natural rubber—hydrocarbons lends itself for such a comparison and is the subject matter of this report.