Title :
Effect of crystallinity on charge storage in polypropylene and polyethylene
Author :
Nath, R. ; Perlman, M.M.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Phys., Coll. Mil. R. de Saint-Jean, Que., Canada
Abstract :
Charge storage is greatly improved by annealing, different cooling rates, and stretching in polypropylene (PP) and polyethylene (PE). In annealed PP and PE storage increases linearly with both crystallinity and crystallite size. The half-value charge decay temperature can be used as a measure of the latter parameters. Annealing and cooling rate affect the rate of crystalline growth. Changes occur in the physical and/or chemical nature and concentration of defects in the crystalline region, and traps at chain-fold-amorphous interfaces. Annealing 4:1 stretched polypropylene film at 140°C gave a half-value charge decay temperature of 152°C, some 70°C higher than the unannealed, unstretched film. Stretching increases the amorphous content, thus creating new boundaries, decreases crystallite size, and creates defect traps
Keywords :
annealing; defect electron energy states; dielectric polarisation; electron energy states of amorphous solids; electron traps; polymer structure; polymers; annealing; chain-fold-amorphous interfaces; charge decay temperature; charge storage; cooling rates; crystallinity; crystallite size; defect traps; defects; polyethylene; polypropylene; stretching; traps; Amorphous materials; Annealing; Charge measurement; Cooling; Crystallization; Current measurement; Physics; Polyethylene; Size measurement; Temperature;
Conference_Titel :
Electrets, 1988. (ISE 6) Proceedings., 6th International Symposium on (IEEE Cat. No.88CH2593-2)
Conference_Location :
Oxford
DOI :
10.1109/ISE.1988.38521