G. Lunabarcenas et al., SEMICRYSTALLINE MICROFIBRILS AND HOLLOW FIBERS BY PRECIPITATION WITH A COMPRESSED-FLUID ANTISOLVENT, Polymer, 36(16), 1995, pp. 3173-3182
Solutions of polyacrylonitrile (PAN) in dimethylformamide (DMF) spraye
d into supercritical fluid carbon dioxide form hollow fibres and highl
y oriented microfibrils (<1 mu m diameter). In the dilute region, micr
ofibrils are produced with diameters as low as 100 nm due to the dipol
e-dipole forces, in contrast with microspheres produced from solutions
of polystyrene (PS) in toluene. For PAN microfibrils, orientation inc
reases with shear, then goes through a maximum and eventually decrease
s at higher flow rates due to an expanding jet. The concentration for
the transition from microfibrils to a single hollow fibre is in agreem
ent with the calculated transition concentration from the dilute to se
midilute region, C. In the semidilute region, the morphology changes
from hollow fibres to highly oriented fibrils with an increase in flow
rate. The increase in turbulence enhances convective mass transport,
leading to more uniform nucleation throughout the cross-section of the
jet, favouring the highly oriented fibrils. The enhanced transport of
CO2 into the jet lowers the solvent quality, raising C, which furthe
r favours fibril formation. For both PAN-DMF and PS-toluene solutions,
the transition from highly oriented microfibrils to hollow fibres occ
urs at about 3C (in a good solvent), suggesting some similarities in
the mass-transfer pathways in each system.