The styrene-butadiene materials possess a two-phase microstructure due to incompatibility between the
polystyrene and
polybutadiene blocks, the former separating into spheres or rods depending on the exact composition. With low polystyrene content, the material is elastomeric with the properties of the polybutadiene predominating. Generally they offer a much wider range of properties than conventional cross-linked rubbers because the composition can vary to suit final construction goals. Block copolymers can "microphase separate" to form periodic nanostructures, as in the styrene-butadiene-styrene (SBS) block copolymer (shown at right). The polymer is known as
Kraton and is used for shoe soles and
adhesives. Owing to the microfine structure, a
transmission electron microscope (TEM) was needed to examine the structure. The butadiene matrix was stained with
osmium tetroxide to provide contrast in the image. The material was made by
living polymerization so that the blocks are almost
monodisperse, so helping to create a very regular microstructure. The
molecular weight of the polystyrene blocks in the main picture is 102,000; the inset picture has a molecular weight of 91,000, producing slightly smaller domains. The spacing between domains has been confirmed by
small-angle X-ray scattering, a technique which gives information about
microstructure. Since most polymers are incompatible with one another, forming a block polymer will usually result in phase separation, and the principle has been widely exploited since the introduction of the SBS block polymers, especially where one of the block is highly crystalline. One exception to the rule of incompatibility is the material
Noryl, where polystyrene and
polyphenylene oxide or PPO form a continuous blend with one another. Other TPEs have crystalline domains where one kind of block co-crystallizes with other block in adjacent chains, such as in copolyester rubbers, achieving the same effect as in the SBS block polymers. Depending on the block length, the domains are generally more stable than the latter owing to the higher crystal
melting point. That point determines the processing temperatures needed to shape the material, as well as the ultimate service use temperatures of the product. Such materials include Hytrel, a polyester-polyether copolymer and
Pebax, a nylon or polyamide-polyether copolymer. == Advantages ==