IE has some particular behavior involving cacheing. Arguably not incorrect, but different than the other browsers. See this post for more info.
One technique, which is not following best practice (!), would be to make sure your expire dates are a healthy time in the future, and to not send last-modified to IE. Then IE will not send the if-modified-since request, but instead will only send requests when the cache has expired. In that case it will get a new document (200) instead of a 304. This new document should set the expires date a healthy time in the future. thus eliminating many requests by using the cached version which has an expired date in the future.
the if-modified-since requests are the heart of your 304 responses. The 304 responses are correct if the document has not been modified since the time IE is sending. The problem is that if your expired time is in the past, ie will always make this request (making a call to the server every time!).. and will never get a new expires date. so it will just keep making the same call and your server will keep replying with the same 304 response.
I am guessing that chrome is not a problem for you in terms of the number of requests to the server. if it is, can you better explain the number of requests you are seeing in both browsers, and the flow?