Ch13 1 PolymerMelt&Extrusion
Ch13 1 PolymerMelt&Extrusion
Ch13 1 PolymerMelt&Extrusion
Plastic Products
Plastics can be shaped into a wide variety of products: Molded parts Extruded sections Films Sheets Insulation coatings on electrical wires Fibers for textiles
Less energy is required than for metals due to much lower processing temperatures Handling of product is simplified during production because of lower temperatures
2. Thermosets
Undergo a curing process during heating and shaping, causing a permanent change (cross-linking) in molecular structure Once cured, they cannot be remelted
Polymer Melts
To shape a thermoplastic polymer it must be heated so that it softens to the consistency of a liquid In this form, it is called a polymer melt Important properties of polymer melts: Viscosity Viscoelasticity
Most polymer shaping processes involve flow through small channels or die openings.
Ketchup, a highly viscoelastic fluid (like the polymer melt)
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Flow rates are often large, leading to high shear rates and shear stresses, so significant pressures are required to accomplish the processes.
Figure 13.1 Viscosity relationships for Newtonian fluid and typical polymer melt.
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Figure 13.2 Viscosity as a function of temperature for selected polymers at a shear rate of 103 s-1.
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Viscoelasticity
Combination of viscosity and elasticity.
Possessed by both polymer solids and polymer melts. Examples: Shampoo, hand cream, mayonnaise, toothpaste, yoghurt.
Temperature, time and shear rate are important and affect the properties of viscoelastic materials (here the polymer melts). Example: die swell in extrusion, in which the hot plastic expands when exiting the die opening.
Die Swell
Extruded polymer "remembers" its previous shape when in the larger cross section of the extruder, tries to return to it after leaving the die orifice.
Figure 13.3 Die swell, a manifestation of viscoelasticity in polymer melts, as depicted here on exiting an extrusion die.
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Rod Climbing
In this video clip a dilute (0.025 wt%) solution of a high molecular weight polystyrene polymer is dissolved in a low molecular weight Newtonian viscous solvent (Piccolastic, Hercules Inc).
Vortices: If you stir water or iced tea (Newtonian liquids) vigorously (but not too vigorously!), you may see tiny "swirls" parallel to the axis of stirring. The flow is downwards.
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Extrusion
13.2
16
Extrusion
Compression process in which material is forced to flow through a die orifice to provide long continuous product whose cross-sectional shape is determined by the shape of the orifice. Widely used for thermoplastics and elastomers to mass produce items such as tubing, pipes, hose, structural shapes, sheet and film, continuous filaments, and coated electrical wire. Carried out as a continuous process; extrudate is then cut into desired lengths.
Extruder
Figure 13.4 Components and features of a (single-screw) extruder for plastics and elastomers.
Polymer is transformed into fluid, air mixed is extracted, and material is compressed.
Melt is homogenized and sufficient pressure developed to pump it through die opening.
Die - not an extruder component Special tool that must be fabricated for particular profile to be produced.
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Extruder Barrel
Internal diameter typically ranges from 25 to 150 mm (1.0 to 6.0 in.)
L/D ratios usually between 10 and 30: higher ratios for thermoplastics, lower ratios for elastomers
Feedstock fed by gravity onto screw whose rotation moves material through barrel.
Electric heaters melt feedstock; subsequent mixing and mechanical working adds heat which maintains the melt
Extruder Screw
Divided into sections to serve several functions:
Feed section - feedstock is moved from hopper and preheated. Compression section - polymer is transformed into fluid, air mixed with pellets is extracted from melt, and material is compressed. Metering section - melt is homogenized and sufficient pressure developed to pump it through die opening.
Figure 13.5 Details of an extruder screw inside the barrel. Pressure is largely determined by dc.
Solid profiles Hollow profiles, such as tubes Wire and cable coating Sheet and film Filaments
Hollow Profiles
Examples: tubes, pipes, hoses, and other cross-sections containing holes Hollow profiles require mandrel to form the shape Mandrel held in place using a spider Polymer melt flows around legs supporting the mandrel to reunite into a monolithic tube wall Mandrel often includes an air channel through which air is blown to maintain hollow form of extrudate during hardening
Extrusion bridge die making a hollow section product. Note that in the picture the die has been split to show the material passing through it. In reality, the die and the ring fit together, with a gap for the extruded material to flow through.
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Openlearn, UK
Blow Extrusion
Blow extrusion, in which molten extrudate is forced past a tubing mandrel, expanded into a balloon shape by a stream of air, drawn upward by rollers, and pinched into a collapsed sheet to be cut into a number of products.
Figure 13.11 Side view cross-section of die for coating of electrical wire by extrusion.
Test yourself!
What are the names of different sections along the extrusion barrel?
3- Metering Section
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2- Compression Section
1- Feed Section
Test yourself!
Could extrusion be used for the following products? 1. The body of a food mixer. 2. Copper pipe for a central heating system. 3. The body of a pen.
1.
2. 3.
The body of the food mixer has a complex 3D shape, so it certainly could not be extruded. Copper pipe is ideal for manufacturing by extrusion, using a bridge die to extrude the hollow shape. The ink tube in the pen has probably been extruded. Some pens bodies vary in diameter along their length and are typically closed off at one end. This would suggest that the pen body is not extruded. For pieces that have more complex shapes, like caps, ends,
and mechanical components, injection molding is used.
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