Polymer Processing-2
Polymer Processing-2
Introduction
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PRIMER
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WHAT IS A POLYMER?
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A polymer is
Long chain molecule, often based on organic
chemical building blocks (monomers)
Long molecules (Mw ~100,000 Da) have solidlike properties
The chain may be amorphous (no regular
structure), crystalline (a regular repeating
structure), crosslinked,
Dendrimers and oligomers have different
properties
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Chemical structure
Chain morphology constitution, configuration, conformation
Degree of polymerization = number of repeating units
Building block sources hydrocarbons, renewable materials
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Building blocks
5% of petroleum goes
into polymers
Sustainable use is
possible
Energy recovery is
possible if solid
polymers are
combusted
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Type
gas
NG
liquid
Crude
solid
Coal
14
Renew- cellulose
able
5.3
Hemicellulose
lignin
6.8
protein
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Building methods
Chain (addition)
Example polyethylene (PE)
from ethylene
Small number of reacting
chains at any one time,
which can grow into long
molecules prior to
termination
Long reaction times needed
to achieve high conversions
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Step (condensation)
Example poly(ethylene
terephthalate) (PET) from
terephthalic acid and
ethylene glycol
Endgroups react to build the
chain; long reaction times
needed to achieve high
polymer
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Chain configurations
Linear repeating units are aligned
sequentially
Branched large segments branch off the
main chain/carbon backbone
Crosslinked/network chemical crosslinks
between chains add mechanical strength
EXAMPLES?
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Multiphase systems
Composites
Structural
Random
Other
Nanocomposites
Blends
Dispersed lamellae, cylinders, spheres
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Mechanical + Thermal
Thermoplastic solidified by cooling and
reheated by melting
Thermosets retain their structure when
reheated after polymerization (usually
crosslinked)
Elastomers rubbers, deform readily with
applied force
Thermoplastic elastomers
other
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WHAT IS IN A COMMERCIAL
PRODUCT?
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Polymeric materials
Compete well on a strength/weight basis
Easy to form into 3D shapes
Creep under load is usually poor; this behavior
is usually corrected by adding fillers or fibers
Low corrosion in the environment compared
to metals
Generally good solvent resistance
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Thermoplastics
Commodities: 75% of the polymer volume
used is with 4 polymer families, polyethylene,
polystyrene, polypropylene and poly(vinyl
chloride) [low cost]
Intermediate: higher heat deflection
temperatures
Engineering plastics: can be used in boiling
water
Advanced thermoplastics: extreme properties
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Thermosets
High moduli, high flex strengths, high heat
deflection temperatures
Shape is retained during thermal cycling
Often made with step/condensation
polymerization systems
Crosslinking is usually used
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Polymerization
Formulation
Fabrication
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Formulation
Additives are used to modify properties
and/or lower costs
Additives: heat stabilizer, light stabilizer,
lubricant, colorant, flame retardant, foaming
agent, plasticizer
Reinforcement: particulate minerals, glass
spheres, activated carbon, fibers
Blends, alloys, laminates
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Processing properties
Performance properties
Composites: polymers with fiber fillers
Packaging: multiple layers often used
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Formulation operations
Thermoplastics: melting or solvent processing
Thermosets: additive addition to monomers
or to prepregs
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Fabrication
Varies by industry sector
Adhesive
Coating
Elastomer
Plastic
fiber
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adhesive
coatings
composites
elastomers
fibers
foams
plastics
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Commodity plastics
Polymer
Major uses
LDPE
HDPE
PP
PVC
PS
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Film blowing
High strength films are achieved by
orienting the crystallites. The film is
biaxially oriented; the wind-up rolls
stretch the film in the machine direction
and the expansion of the film radially
provides a hoop stress force.
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Wire coating
Wire coating speeds can be high, and process start-up is challenging. Metal wires may need sizing,
or wetting agents in the polymer melt for good adhesion.
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Calendaring
Thin and thick section calendaring is used to make wide sheets (8-12 ft).
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Bottle blowing
The parison is inflated,
developing biaxially
orientation similar to that of
blown film. The sides of the
mold provide cooling, quickly
freezing in the orientation
developed during the
blowing process. When this
process is used to make soda
bottles of PET, the
orientation is critical to
achieving low carbon dioxide
permeation rates (and long
bottle shelf life).
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Compression molding
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Thermoset applications
Polymer
Major uses
Urea-formaldehyde
resins (UF)
Unsaturated
polyester (UP)
Epoxy (EP)
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Elastomers
The polymers used for elastomers usually have
very low heat deflection and melt temperatures
Solids with good mechanical properties are made
by crosslinking polymer chains together
The molecular weight of elastomer parts is the
size of the object
Vulcanization of rubber uses sulfur to provide
crosslinks between the C=C bonds of natural
rubber.
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Fibers
Fibers are based on highly crystalline polymers
that can be oriented axially to have great
strength. Orientation (cold drawing) develops
crystal structure in the solid.
Most natural fibers from biomass are based
on cellulose; spider silk has different
compositions and is based on a set of
copolymers
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Elastomer polymers
Polymer family
description
Styrene-butadiene
Polybutadiene
Cis-1,4-polymer
Ethylene-propylene
Polychloroprene
Polyisoprene
Nitrile rubber
Butyl rubber
Silicon rubber
Urethane rubber
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Synthetic fibers
Fiber type
description
Cellulosic
acetate rayon
Cellulose acetate
viscose rayon
regenerated cellulose
Non-cellulosic
Polyester
Nylon
Olefin
Acrylic
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Coatings
Coatings. Major area for expansion; solar cells,
windows, Supplier base is highly
fragmented.
Paints. Major area for expansion; vehicles,
Materials supplier base is clustered; painting
systems base is clustered; user base is
fragmented
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Adhesives
Highly fragmented market.
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Foams
Major area: insulation
for housing, sound
control,
Materials:
polystyrene,
polyurethanes,
Reaction injection
molding example
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Composites
Thermosets and thermoplastics
Sheet molding compounds
Filament winding
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Source-based names
Source-based name when the polymer is derived
from a single (original or hypothetical) monomer;
or random co-/ter-polymers
Poly(vinyl alcohola)
Poly(styrene-co-butadiene)
Polyformaldehyde (not polyoxymethylene)b
Poly(ethylene oxide) (not poly(ethylene glycol)b
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Structure-based names
Structure-based name when the
constitutional repeating unit (CRU) has several
components
The CRU is independent of the monomers and
polymerization methods
Poly(hexamethylene adipamide)
Poly(ethylene terephthalate)
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copolymers
Type
Connective
Example
unspecified
-co-
Poly(A-co-B)
statistical
-stat-
Poly(A-stat-B)
random
-ran-
Poly(A-ran-B)
alternating
-alt-
Poly(A-alt-B)
periodic
-per-
Poly(A-per-B-per-C)
block
-block- (-b-)
graft
-graft- (-g-)
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Source-based name
Structure-based name
polyethylene
polymethylene
polypropylene
Poly(propylene)
PP
polyisobutylene
Poly(1,1-dmethylethylene)
PIB
polystyrene
Poly(1-phenylethylene)
Styron, Styrofoam
Poly(vinyl chloride)
Poly(1-chloroethylene)
PVC
Poly(vinylidene chloride)
Poly(1,1-dichlorethylene)
Saran
polytetrafluoroethylene
Poly(difluoromethylene)
Teflon
Poly(vinyl acetate)
Poly(1-acetoxyethylene)
PVAC
Poly(vinyl alcohol)
Poly(1-hydroxyethylene)
PVAL
Poly(methyl methacrylate)
Poly(1-methoxycarbonyl-1methylethylene)
polyacrylonitrile
Poly(1-cyanoethylene)
polybutadiene
Poly(1-butenylene)
BR rubber
polyisoprene
Poly(1-methyl-1-butenylene)
NR rubber
polychloroprene
Poly(1-chloro-butenylene)
Neoprene
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Structure-based name
polyformaldehyde
Poly(oxymethylene)
POM
Poly(ethylene oxide)
Poly(oxyethylene)
PEO
Poly(oxyethylene oxyadipoyl)
Polyester 2,6
Poly(ethylene terephthalate)
Poly(oxyethylene oxy-terephthaloyl)
PET; Dacron
Poly(hexamethylene
adipamide)
Poly(e-caprolactam)
Poly(imino[1-oxohexamethylene])
Nylon 6
polyglycine
Poly(imino[1-oxoethylene])
Nylon 2
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Bond energy,
kcal/mol
Range of action,
Angstrom
Dispersion
0.1-5.0
3-5 (r-6)
Dipole-dipole
0.5-5.0
1-2 (r-3)
Dipole-induced
dipole
0.05-0.5
1-2 (r-6)
Hydrogen bond
1.0-12
2-3 (r-2)
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Few synthetic polymers are monodisperse, i.e., have one chain length.
Many biological polymers do have specific molecular weights, e.g., proteins,
DNA,
The molecular weight distribution has critical effects on polymer properties
in the melt and solid states.
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State
Use
1-4
Gas
Gaseous fuel
5-11
gasoline
9-16
Medium viscosity
liquid
kerosene
16-25
Oil, grease
25-50
Crystalline solid
Paraffin wax
1000-3000
Plastic solid
(crystalline +
amorphous)
polyethylene
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Linear
alkane
properties
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MWD - oligomer
Poly(a-olefin); PAO6
Synthetic base oil
vehicle use
Trimer, tetramer,
pentamer, hexamer,
heptamer
Based on 1-decene
Ionic polymerization
Differential distribution
by size exclusion
chromatography
PeakFit used for curve
deconvolution
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Two polyethylenes
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n M
i
Mn
PD
w M n M
i
Mw
w
i
2
i
n M
i
Mw
Mn
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In-class exercise
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In-class exercise
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Thermal properties are often key criteria used to select polymers for specific
applications.
Five regions of viscoelastic behavior (many polymers have all five): < glass
transition, power law region, rubbery plateau, rubbery flow, fluid flow
Other crystalline solids, crosslinked elastomers
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Typical G vs T plots
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regions
Viscoelasticity: most polymers creep(slow flow) under long-term stress.
Creep may not be recoverable, i.e., the sample may not recoil to its
original dimensions. Over short periods of time, polymers are elastic.
Solid yield and fracture: elasticity for e < 0.1%; PS is brittle and fails at low
elongations. PE yields, and then undergoes cold drawing to > 300%
elongation.
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BUILDING A GLOSSARY
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