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Pressure and Viscous Heating Effect on Viscosity of Polymer Melts

y. L. x. H/2. z. W/2. Pressure and Viscous Heating Effect on Viscosity of Polymer Melts. Benjamin Rudin, Max Schoengart, Tim Osswald. Viscosity calculation. Objective. Motivation. Experimental setup. The trend to thin wall injection molding in order

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Pressure and Viscous Heating Effect on Viscosity of Polymer Melts

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  1. y L x H/2 z W/2 Pressure and Viscous Heating Effect on Viscosity of Polymer Melts Benjamin Rudin, Max Schoengart, Tim Osswald Viscosity calculation Objective Motivation Experimental setup • The trend to thin wall injection molding in order • to save material has led to new versions of • injection molding like expansion injection • molding (EIM) For the Slit: • measuring rheological properties • under pressure • determine the pressure effect on • viscosity of polymer melts • Radial Functions Method (RFM) • according to the slit problem to • consider viscous heating effects, • determine a pressure shift factor • and validate experimental results Kistler 6157BB dynamic pressure transducers • viscosity: 3 pressures p1 , p2 , p3 range: 0 – 2000 bar Arburg Allrounder 320S Max injection pressure: 2500 bar • wall shear stress: thermocouple • Three pressure • transducers • measuring the • pressure along • the slit • corrected shear rate: • Two thermocouples control the constant • temperature of the rheometer • By injecting polymer with an injection molding • machine at a constant flow rate, viscosity • can be calculated. with ; n = power law coefficent • These technologies request high pressures. • To improve simulation results in engineering • predevelopments pressure effect on • viscosity has to be considered. Viscosity model RFM Results Temperature field 2D-field in the center of the slit: Measured pressures and temperatures temperature rise during a shot (viscous heating) Upper half of the slit flow rate: 6 ccm/s Material: Ticona Hostaform C9021 injection temperature: 200°C pressure factor: D3 = 5.75e-8 Cross model WLF-equation H = 0.67 mm W = 30 mm L = 200 mm VH = viscous heating • Viscosity curves • from slit • simulation: • Viscous heating • effect results in • lower viscosity. • Pressure effect • Implies higher • viscosity In this model the dependence of pressure on viscosity is respected by the parameter D3. In general the pressure effect can expressed with Collocation points: x-direction : 15 y-direction : 30 Boundary condition: Isothermal wall (TWall= const.) Use of symmetry Velocity at the wall is zero Max. temperature rise: 31.47 °C

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