500 likes | 1.09k Views
Polymer Processing. Polymer materials. Primary Bond - Covalent Bonding Secondary Bonds – van der Waals Dipole Bonds Hydrogen Bonds. PE - mer. Polymer Properties. T g Glass Transition Temperature MW Molecular Weight
E N D
Polymer materials • Primary Bond - Covalent Bonding • Secondary Bonds – • van der Waals • Dipole Bonds • Hydrogen Bonds PE - mer
Polymer Properties • Tg • Glass Transition Temperature • MW • Molecular Weight • The combination of these two properties will be a great starting point for identifying any polymer material
Major Processes • Extrusion • Injection Molding • Blow Molding • Thermoforming • Rotomolding
Extrusion • The extrusion machine forms the basis of nearly all other polymer processes. • Basically involves melting polymer pellets and extruding them out through a two dimensional die. • Produces long, thin products • Coating for electrical wire • Fishing Line • Tubes, etc.
Injection Molding Product Examples Nylon sheaves
Injection Molding Machine Operating Sequence • Mold closes and screw begins moving forward for injection • The cavity fills as the screw moves forward as a plunger • The cavity is packed as the screw continues to move forward as part solidifies
Injection Molding Machine Operating Sequence, ctd • The cavity cools as the gate freezes off and the screw begins to retract to plasticize material for the next shot • The mold opens for part ejection • The mold closes and the next cycle begins
Injection Molding Process Control • Very similar to die casting • Must control heat transfer and fluid flow • Do that by controlling temperature and pressure
Co-injection Molding 1. Inject Skin 2.a. Inject Core 2.b. Continue injecting core until cavity is filled 3. Inject Skin again to purge sprue.
Gas Assist Injection Molding – Hollow parts without interior control
Injection – Compression Molding • Very similar to squeeze casting
Injection Molding of Thermosets • Thermoplastics “set” when they cool • Mold temperature will be set to allow full cavity fill, while increasing production rate • Thermosets undergo a chemical crosslinking that produces the solid structure • Mold temperature will be hotter usually – set to allow full cavity fill, while accelerating the chemical reaction to cure. • Often called “Reaction Injection Molding” (RIM)
Blow Molding Extrusion Blow Molding Injection Blow Molding Stretch (Parasin) Blow Molding
Rotomolding • Used for relatively dimensionally inaccurate items, usually with a hollow interior • Can be very large • Garbage Cans • Kayaks • Interior dimensions can not be critical • Relatively primitive and therefore inexpensive process
Polymer Recycling • 1998 – Approximately 20% of plastic waste is recycled (optimistic estimate) • 1998 – Polymers account for approximately 18% by volume of material to landfills
Needs for a viable program: Stable supply of materials with reliable collection and sorting Economical, proven and environmentally sound recycling process End use applications for the recycled material Challenges 10-12 main polymer types Thousands of blends Additives Impurities in supply (labels, glass, dirt, etc) Needs vs Challenges
Recycling of Polymers • PET (polyethylene terphthalate) beverage containers, boil-in food pouches, processed meat packages • HDPE (high density polyethylene) milk bottles, detergent bottles, oil bottles, toys, plastic bags • PVC (polyvinyl chloride) food wrap, vegetable oil bottles, blister packaging • LDPE (low density polyethylene) shrink-wrap, plastic bags, garment bags • PP (polypropylene) margarine and yogurt containers, caps for containers, wrapping to replace cellophane • PS (polystyrene) egg cartons, fast food trays, disposable plastic silverware • Other multi-resin containers
Basic recycling steps • Sorting • Size Reduction • Densification • Pulverization • Melt Filtration
Sorting • Manual – very common • Density based sorter • Centrifugal • Float/Sink methods • Optical – same as peas, potato chips, etc • Spectroscopy – Infrared – automation possible
Size Reduction • Shredders • Rotary Knife
Densification • Basic purpose is to reduce to volume taken up by bulk material • Reduce from only 20 kg/m3 to almost 400 kg/m3 • Agglomeration – heat it up and compact it
Pulverization • Convert clean plastic waste into powder • After this process, some of the product can actually be used if low purity requirements • Recycled plastic lumber for example
Melt Filtration • Improve purity of pulverized polymer • Needed for extrusion, injection or blow molding processes • Basic process concept: • Melt it • Shove it through a screen • Additional chemical processing may be needed if additional purity requirement