
Abstract The introduction of one or two long chain branches into a polybutadiene molecule to form trichain or tetrachain molecules, respectively, leads to profound changes in Theological behavior. At low molecular weights the Newtonian (zero shear) viscosity is decreased relative to a linear polymer of the same molecular weight. At molecular weights exceeding 60,000 (trichain) or 100,000 (tetrachain), the Newtonian viscosity rises rapidly above the corresponding value for a linear polybutadiene. However, non-Newtonian behavior of the branched polymers becomes more pronounced the higher the molecular weights, so that at moderate to high shear rates the viscosity of the branched polymers is uniformly lower than that of linear polymers of identical molecular weight.
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