Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 February 2011
If a polymer mixture which is in the bulk one-phase region is next to an interface - this may be with another polymer, with a non-polymeric solid, or with the air - the composition of the mixture at the interface will be different from the bulk [1-4]. There are two questions we would like to understand: what determines the composition of the mixture at the interface, and how does that composition increment decay back to the bulk value. This surface or interface segregation has important practical consequences; in the surface case such segregation will profoundly affect wettability, with consequences for the strength of adhesive joints and the biocompatibility of polymeric surgical implants, as well as influencing friction and wear; at interfaces with non-polymers segregation is important for the adhesion of mixed polymer phases to non-polymer phases such as reinforcing fibres or fillers. In this paper we describe some experiments on surface segregation in a very well characterised model system and we describe a recent theory that can be quantitatively tested by our data. We will consider the consequences of this new understanding of surface segregation in polymer mixtures, and we will argue that many of these conclusions may be carried over to the more general case of interface segregation, which opens up a number of interesting technological possibilities.