Novel flow apparatus for investigating shear-enhanced crystallization and structure development in semicrystalline polymers
- 1 April 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by AIP Publishing in Review of Scientific Instruments
- Vol. 70 (4) , 2097-2104
- https://doi.org/10.1063/1.1149720
Abstract
An instrument to study the effects of shearing on the crystallization process in semicrystalline polymers is described. It can impose transient stresses similar to those encountered in polymer processing and provides in situ monitoring of microstructure development during and after cessation of flow. Box-like wall shear stress profiles (rise and fall times under 50 ms with maximum wall shear stress on the order of 0.1 MPa) can be applied for controlled durations. A unique feature of our device is that it accommodates a wide variety of real-time probes of structure such as visible and infrared polarimetry and light and x-ray scatteringmeasurements. The design also allows us to retrieve the sample for ex situ optical and electron microscopy. Data are acquired with millisecond resolution enabling us to record the extent of shear deformation of the polymer melt during the pressure pulse. Our device works with small sample quantities (as little as 5 g; each experiment takes ∼500 mg ) as opposed to the kilogram quantities required by previous instruments capable of imposing comparable deformations. This orders-of-magnitude reduction in the sample size allows us to study model polymers and new developmental resins, both of which are typically available only in gram-scale quantities. The compact design of the shear cell makes it possible to transport it to synchrotron light sources for in situx-ray scattering studies of the evolution of the crystalline structure. Thus, our device is a valuable new tool that can be used to evaluate the crystallization characteristics of resins with experimental compositions or molecular architectures when subjected to processing-like flow conditions. We demonstrate some of the features of this device by presenting selected results on isotactic polypropylenes.Keywords
This publication has 42 references indexed in Scilit:
- Texture of injection moulded poly(ethylene-2,6-naphthalene dicar☐ylate) partsPolymer, 1997
- Structure development in high-speed spinning of polyethylene naphthalate (PEN) fibersJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1997
- Influence of molecular weight distribution on the melt extrusion of high density polyethylene (HDPE): Effects of melt relaxation behavior on morphology and orientation in HDPE extruded tubular filmsJournal of Rheology, 1996
- Structural gradients developed in injection-molded syndiotactic polystyrene (sPS)Journal of Applied Polymer Science, 1996
- Distribution of higher‐order structures in injection‐molded polypropylenesJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1991
- Crystallization phenomena in the injection molding of poly ether ether ketone and its influence on mechanical propertiesPolymer Engineering & Science, 1990
- Crystal nucleation in sheared polymer meltsPolymer Engineering & Science, 1978
- Nucleation and crystal growth in sheared poly(1‐butene) meltsJournal of Polymer Science: Polymer Symposia, 1978
- Morphology development during shearing of poly(ethylene oxide) meltsJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1976
- Structure development during melt spinning of linear polyethylene fibersJournal of Applied Polymer Science, 1974