Experimental Studies of the Influence of Particle and Fiber Reinforcement on the Rheological Properties of Polymer Melts
- 1 September 1980
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Rubber Division, ACS in Rubber Chemistry and Technology
- Vol. 53 (4) , 823-835
- https://doi.org/10.5254/1.3535062
Abstract
An experimental study is reported on the rheological properties of compounds of a polystyrene melt with calcium carbonate, carbon black, titanium dioxide, calcium sulfate anhydride fiber, mica, glass beads and aramid, cellulose and glass fibers. Comparison is made of the shear viscosity, elongational viscosity and principal normal stress difference of these compounds at 20 volume per cent loadings. The polymer matrix and compounds with the smallest particle dimension greater than 10µ exhibit low shear rate Newtonian viscosities. Suspensions with particle sizes 0.5µ and smaller exhibit yield values. Yield values are also observed in elongational flow for systems exhibiting yielding in shear flow. The experimental data are contrasted to both mechanistic theories of suspensions with interaction between particles and a phenomenological plastic-viscoelastic tensor constitutive equation.This publication has 3 references indexed in Scilit:
- An experimental study of the influence of carbon black on the rheological properties of a polystyrene meltPolymer Engineering & Science, 1979
- Dynamic properties of heat‐treated butyl vulcanizatesJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1963
- The dynamic properties of carbon black‐loaded natural rubber vulcanizates. Part IJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1962