Processing of Polymers and Composites: Lecture 14 - 10/02/2020
Processing of Polymers and Composites: Lecture 14 - 10/02/2020
Lecture 14 – 10/02/2020
Dr S. Gowthaman
Indian Institute of Information Technology Design and Manufacturing Kancheepuram
Chennai - 600127
Mixing Processes
• The process of polymer blending or
mixing is accomplished by distributing
or dispersing a minor or secondary
component within a major component
serving as a matrix.
• The major component can be thought of
as the continuous phase and the minor
components as distributed or dispersed
phases in the form of droplets,
filaments, or agglomerates.
• Normally compatibilizers are added to
ensure the compatibility in the boundary
layers of two phases
Mixing Processes
• In the mixing of polymers, a minor component is generally present as the
secondary phase (usually as drops) in a continuous phase of the major
component
• An elementary step in the mixing process is the deformation of drops in the
flow field, which increases the interfacial area between the two components
accompanied by a decrease in local dimensions perpendicular to the flow
direction.
• Deformation of drops is promoted by the shear stress exerted on the drops by
the flow field and counteracted by the interfacial stress /R (R the local radius)
minimizing the surface to volume ratio, thus tending to a spherical shape.
• The ratio between these two stresses is called the Capillary number Ca:
Mixing Processes
• If the Capillary number exceeds a critical value, Cacrit, the shear stress overrules the
interfacial stress, no stable equilibrium drop shape exists, the drop is extended and
finally will breakup into smaller droplets.
• If Ca < Cacrit, the interfacial stress competes with the shear stress and overrules it so that
the drop will only slightly deform in the flow field, yielding a stable drop shape.