Once a polymer has been melted, mixed and pressurised in an
extruder, it is pumped through an extrusion die for continuous forming (after
cooling and solidification) into a final product. The most common die types are
flat, annular and prole. Products made by extrusion include pipe, tubing,
coating of wire, plastic bottles, plastic films and sheets, plastic bags,
coating for paper and foil, bres, laments, yarns, tapes and a wide array of
profiles.
Polymer extrusion through dies has certain similarities to the
hot extrusion of metals.However, there are also signi-ficant differences. In
metal extrusion the material is pushed forward by a ram, while in polymer
extrusion the material is continuously supplied by a rotating screw. In hot
metal extrusion the temperatures range from 340°C for magnesium to 1325°C for
steel, and the corresponding pressures range from 35 to over 700 MPa.1 5 In
polymer extrusion the temperatures seldom exceed 350°C, and pressures usually
do not go much above 50 MPa at the screw tip. Solid phase extrusion of polymers
has been developed for the production of certain high strength products.At low
temperatures, the molecular orientation imparted by the forcing of the material
through the shaping die remains in the extrudate. Solid state polymer
extrusion has certain similaritiesto the cold extrusion of metals.
Blown film extrusion is the most important process for the
production of thin plastic films from polyethylenes.The molten polymer is
extruded through an annular die (normally of spiral mandrel construction) to
form a thin walled tube which is simultaneously axially drawn and radially
expanded. In most cases the blown film bubble is formed vertically upwards. The
maximum bubble diameteris usually 1.2 – 4 times larger than the die diameter.
The hot melt is cooled by annular streams of high speed air from external air
rings, and occasionally also from internal air distributors. The solidi ed
film passes through a frame which pinches the top of the bubble and is taken
up by rollers. Coextruded films with 3 – 8 layers (sometimes up to 11) are
also produced by this process, for use in food packaging.
Cast film and sheet extrusion involves extruding a poly- mer
through a at die with a wide opening (up to 10 m), onto a chilled steel
roller or rollers which quench and solidify the molten material. Film is
generally defined as a product thinner than 0.25 mm, while sheet is thicker
than this.The cast film process is used for very tight tolerances of thin
film, or for low viscosity resins. Most flat dies are of T slot or coathanger
designs, which contain a manifold to spread the flowing polymer across the
width of the die, followed downstream by alternating narrow and open slits to
create the desired flow distribution and pressure drop. Most cast film lines
manufactured today are coextrusion lines, com- bining layers from as many as
seven extruders into the product through multimanifold dies, or single manifold
dies with the aid of feedblocks.
In film extrusion, the shear rates at the die lips are usually
~103 s21. When the wall shear stress exceeds a certain value (usually 0.14 MPa
in research papers, higher in industry with the help of additives),the
extrudate surface loses its gloss owing to the sharkskin melt fracture
phenomenon.Sharkskin can be described as a sequence of ridges visible to the
naked eye, perpendicular to the flow direction.
Pipe and tubing extrusion involves pumping a molten polymer
throughanannulardie,followingwhich the extruded product, while being pulled,
passes through a vacuum sizer where it attains its final dimensions. This is
followed by spray or immersion cooling and cutting to fixed lengths. Pipe of
diameter up to 2 m or greater is made by this process, and tubing with
diameters from 10 mm down to below 1 mm. The annular dies are normally of
spider or spiral mandrel design.
In wire and cable coating processes, individual wires or wire
assemblies are pulled at very high speed through a crosshead die, at right
angles to the extruder axis. In high pressure extrusion, the polymer
melt meets the wire or cable before the die exit, for example insulating of
individual wires. In low pressure extrusion, the melt meets the cable after the
die exit, for example jacketing of assemblies of insulated cables. Very high
shear rates are frequently encountered in this process(up to 106 s2 1 ) and low
viscosity resins are used.
Profile extrusion is a manufacturing process used for products
of constant cross-section. These can range from simple shapes to very complex
profiles with multiple chambers and fingers. Examplesrange from picture frame
mouldings, to automotive trim, to edging for tabletops,to window lineals. The
extruded materials are classi ed (roughly) as rigid or fiexible. The typical
prole extrusion line consists of an extruder pumping a polymer through a
prole die, followed by a sizing tank or calibrator, additional cooling
troughs, a puller and a cutoff device. The design of profile dies requires
considerable experience and patience.Output limitations in profile extrusion
are encountered owing to either sharkskin (for thin products produced from high
viscosity polymers) or the ability to cool thick walled products. Polymer pipe
and profile extrusion is similar to the hot extrusion of metals for the
production of continuous hollow shapes of barlike objects. However, the
mathematicalmodelling of these processesfor metals is based mainly on elastic –
plastic flow hypotheses.
In melt spinning, the molten polymer ows through numerous
capillaries in a spinneret (up to 1000). The poly- mer is delivered under
pressure by a gear pump for accurate metering, after passing through a lter
which follows the extruder. On exiting the capillaries, the laments are
attenuated to the desired diameter.For the production of very thin fibres, the
melt blowing process is used. In this process the bres are attenuated by the
drag force exerted by a high velocity air jet.
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