Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE

© 2020 The Society of Rheology. Polymer crystallization occurs in many plastic manufacturing processes, from injection molding to film blowing. Linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) is one of the most commonly processed polymers, wherein the type and extent of short-chain branching (SCB) may be va...

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Main Authors: Andreev, Marat, Nicholson, David A., Kotula, Anthony, Moore, Jonathan D., den Doelder, Jaap, Rutledge, Gregory C.
Other Authors: Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Society of Rheology 2022
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/135279.2
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author Andreev, Marat
Nicholson, David A.
Kotula, Anthony
Moore, Jonathan D.
den Doelder, Jaap
Rutledge, Gregory C.
author2 Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
author_facet Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering
Andreev, Marat
Nicholson, David A.
Kotula, Anthony
Moore, Jonathan D.
den Doelder, Jaap
Rutledge, Gregory C.
author_sort Andreev, Marat
collection MIT
description © 2020 The Society of Rheology. Polymer crystallization occurs in many plastic manufacturing processes, from injection molding to film blowing. Linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) is one of the most commonly processed polymers, wherein the type and extent of short-chain branching (SCB) may be varied to influence crystallization. In this work, we report simultaneous measurements of the rheology and Raman spectra, using a Rheo-Raman microscope, for two industrial-grade LLDPEs undergoing crystallization. These polymers are characterized by broad polydispersity, SCB, and the presence of polymer chain entanglements. The rheological behavior of these entangled LLDPE melts is modeled as a function of crystallinity using a slip-link model. The partially crystallized melt is represented by a blend of linear chains with either free or cross-linked ends, wherein the cross-links represent attachment to growing crystallites, and a modulus shift factor that increases with the degree of crystallinity. In contrast to our previous application of the slip-link model to isotactic polypropylene, in which the introduction of only bridging segments with cross-links at both ends was sufficient to describe the available data, for these LLDPEs, we find it necessary to introduce dangling segments, with cross-links at only one end. The model captures quantitatively the evolution of viscosity and elasticity with crystallization over the whole range of frequencies in the linear regime for the two LLDPE grades.
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spelling mit-1721.1/135279.22024-06-03T17:08:49Z Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE Andreev, Marat Nicholson, David A. Kotula, Anthony Moore, Jonathan D. den Doelder, Jaap Rutledge, Gregory C. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Department of Chemical Engineering © 2020 The Society of Rheology. Polymer crystallization occurs in many plastic manufacturing processes, from injection molding to film blowing. Linear low-density polyethylene (LLDPE) is one of the most commonly processed polymers, wherein the type and extent of short-chain branching (SCB) may be varied to influence crystallization. In this work, we report simultaneous measurements of the rheology and Raman spectra, using a Rheo-Raman microscope, for two industrial-grade LLDPEs undergoing crystallization. These polymers are characterized by broad polydispersity, SCB, and the presence of polymer chain entanglements. The rheological behavior of these entangled LLDPE melts is modeled as a function of crystallinity using a slip-link model. The partially crystallized melt is represented by a blend of linear chains with either free or cross-linked ends, wherein the cross-links represent attachment to growing crystallites, and a modulus shift factor that increases with the degree of crystallinity. In contrast to our previous application of the slip-link model to isotactic polypropylene, in which the introduction of only bridging segments with cross-links at both ends was sufficient to describe the available data, for these LLDPEs, we find it necessary to introduce dangling segments, with cross-links at only one end. The model captures quantitatively the evolution of viscosity and elasticity with crystallization over the whole range of frequencies in the linear regime for the two LLDPE grades. 2022-06-03T20:02:30Z 2021-10-27T20:22:46Z 2022-06-03T20:02:30Z 2020-11 2020-06 2021-06-14T18:02:14Z Article http://purl.org/eprint/type/JournalArticle 0148-6055 1520-8516 https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/135279.2 en http://dx.doi.org/10.1122/8.0000110 Journal of Rheology Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0/ application/octet-stream Society of Rheology Other repository
spellingShingle Andreev, Marat
Nicholson, David A.
Kotula, Anthony
Moore, Jonathan D.
den Doelder, Jaap
Rutledge, Gregory C.
Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title_full Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title_fullStr Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title_full_unstemmed Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title_short Rheology of crystallizing LLDPE
title_sort rheology of crystallizing lldpe
url https://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/135279.2
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