Polymer Processing III Flashcards

1
Q

How does concentration impact polymer viscosity in solutions?

A

viscosity is highly dependent on concentration
- analogous to the relationship between viscosity and molecular weight in polymer melts

see 3 distinct phases:
- to C* is dilute and increases slightly

  • C* to Ce is semidilute, unentangled - where the hydrodynamic volumes start to overlap
  • Ce to C** and up is semi-dilute entangled, where the polymer lines are entangled and causes significant increase in viscosity

And then above C** is concentrated, where may start to get phase separations

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2
Q

Increasing polymer solution concentration and viscosity change with shear rate

A
  • increasing concentration starts at a higher initial viscosity, but all end up with similar slope when it enter shear thinning
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3
Q

What is solvent casting?

A
  • not often done on industrial scale, but most basic form
  • polymer is blended with a volatile solvent (chi < 0.5) then cast onto a smooth surface. Solvent is removed through evaporation to create a dry film (drying may be at ambient conditions or assisted by a vacuum oven)
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4
Q

What is spray coating?

A

can be used at scale for ultrathin coatings

  • spray out polymer through a nozzle to get fine dispersion (this becomes more difficult if polymer has high entanglement/viscoelastic effects)
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5
Q

What is spin coating?

A
  • often used in organic polymers and to produce uniform layers
  • rotation is used to evenly spread a polymer solution across a prepared substrate (solvent evaporates as its spun - spinning forces solvent to evaporate very quickly)
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6
Q

What is dip coating?

A

use a large bath of polymers, dip a substrate in and get polymer to attach to side (put on polymer coatings - desired to get certain surface qualities) solvent evaporates once pulled out of bath

qualities:
- corrosion resistance
- waterproofing
-antifouling
- modifying friction
- electrical insulation

*an inexpensive technique that allows complete surface coverage

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7
Q

What is fibre spinning?

A

uses extensional flow of a polymer solution to produce highly oriented continuous fibres with controlled diameters

  • similar to nanofibrillation, a spinnet (extruder like) where the fibres are pulled into a spindel

*can be done wet spinning or dry spinning (where hot air evaporates the solvent)

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8
Q

What is electrospinning?

A

uses a current to draw extremely fine filaments from a polymer solution. The polymer narrows into a taylor cone as its pulled and then as its pulled even more away from the spinneret, it starts to coil

  • this is an extremely finicky process and sensitive to process variables. It has a very low throughput and challenging to scale, but capable of producing fibres with nanoscale diameters
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9
Q

How is fibre spinning affected by polymer concentration?

A
  • spinnability and fibre morphology are highly dependent on polymer concentration in solution
  • C < C* = electrospray (get droplets)
  • Ce > C > C* = beaded fibres (not desired)
  • Cmax > C > Ce = homogeneous fibres
  • C > Cmax = needle clogging (high fiber diameters)
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