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Capillary rheometry for polymer melts revisited
Authors:Hans?Martin?Laun  author-information"  >  author-information__contact u-icon-before"  >  mailto:martin.laun@basf-ag.de"   title="  martin.laun@basf-ag.de"   itemprop="  email"   data-track="  click"   data-track-action="  Email author"   data-track-label="  "  >Email author
Affiliation:(1) Polymer Research, Polymer Physics, BASF Aktiengesellschaft, Building G 201, 67056 Ludwigshafen, Germany
Abstract:Capillary rheometry provides an efficient access to high shear rate flow properties relevant for processing. An automated gas driven capillary rheometer developed at BASF enables accurate measurements at imposed wall shear stress, thus supplementing instruments operating at imposed flow rate. A simplified treatment of dissipative heating based on the assumption of a radially flat temperature profile is outlined and justified by means of finite element simulations. The combined treatment of dissipation and pressure dependent viscosity yields relations to treat throttling experiments at imposed flow rate. Throttle pressure coefficients from a long die and an orifice agree for LDPE but significantly differ for PagrMSAN. The effect is explained on the basis of identical pressure coefficients for shear and elongational flows, with regard to a constant stress, however. The effect of melt compressibility is negligible in practical capillary rheometry if the temperature and pressure coefficients of the melt density are by an order of magnitude smaller than those of the viscosity. Gas pressure driven instruments allow an effective determination of wall slip velocities from Mooney plots. This is of advantage for the investigation of the mechanism of additives or processing aids. Furthermore, imposed pressure experiments are pertinent to investigate the spurt effect of HDPE and to demonstrate that two different slip processes contribute to the apparent flow curve above spurt.
Contact InformationHans Martin LaunEmail:
Keywords:Capillary rheometry  Imposed pressure  Dissipative heating  Pressure dependent viscosity  Throttling experiment  Wall slip  Spurt of HDPE  Mechanism of additives
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