Study of the α and β relaxations on a commercial poly(vinyl chloride) by thermally stimulated creep and depolarization current techniques

Abstract
Thermally stimulated creep and depolarization current measurements have been carried out in a temperature range between −180 and 120 °C, on a pure commercial poly(vinyl chloride). Mechanical and dielectric relaxation times involved in α and β relaxations are obtained by fractional stresses/polarizations procedure. The distribution of the Arrhenius-like kinetic parameters, deduced from the relaxation times, is interpreted in terms of compensation laws. From the obtained results, a same molecular origin can be assumed for the mechanical and dielectric behavior in both α and β relaxations. Moreover, the compensation law analysis leads to two different relaxations modes, likely associated to two kinds of thermally activated molecular motions, in β relaxation. In the α region, the values of found kinetic parameters point out a high degree of cooperativeness of the involved molecular motions. Depolarization curve in this region shows a high temperature peak, not found in the mechanical one, whose evolution with the poling field allows us to assign it to a nondipolar process associated to the movement of free charge carriers.