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Fundamentals of the Shear Roll Milling Process Dilhan M. Kalyon and Halil Gevgilili Stevens Institute of Technology. 12 th Extruder and Continuous Mixer Users Group Indian Head, MD October 29, 2002. Some Features of the Shear Roll Mill:
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Fundamentals of the Shear Roll Milling Process Dilhan M. Kalyonand Halil Gevgilili Stevens Institute of Technology 12th Extruder and Continuous Mixer Users Group Indian Head, MD October 29, 2002
Some Features of the Shear Roll Mill: • The surface of the rolls have spiraling grooves which allow conveying of the material forward • The Material wraps around one roll (feed roll) and detaches from the other one (conveying roll) • The feed roll has rougher surface than the conveying roll. • The speeds of the rolls can be adjusted independently • The gap size between the rolls is adjustable • Both rolls have independent temperature control. • A loss in weight feeder is generally utilized to feed material between the rolls
Objectives of the study • To investigate the dynamics of the shear roll mill process and to relate to the rheological behavior of the melt • To specifically focus on the wall interactions and the roll wall slip plays in the sporadic premature detachment of the melt from the feed roll to lead to process failures.
Test Material: HDPE, manufactured by Exxon Mobil Corporation Designation: HDA 601 ethylene hexene copolymer Density=0.933 g/cc (ASTM D-1505) Melt Index=0.55 (ASTM D-1238) General purpose, sheet extrusion grade
Under typical processing conditions, the material sticks to the feed roll with has a roughened surface Material Sticks to the conveying roll when the conveying roll temperature is is at least 17ºC higher than the feed roll The process may become unstable under some conditions
gׂ=70 s-1, t=0.1 s, g=7 Sample ejection from the gap gׂ=60 s-1 gׂ=50 s-1 gׂ=70 s-1 gׂ=23 s-1 gׂ=10 s-1 gׂ=5 s-1 gׂ=10 s-1, t=1 s, g=10 t=0 s, g=0
Critical wall shear stress values at slip in torsional flow HDPE: • @ 170C tc=0.22 MPa • @ 190C tc= 0.22 MPa • @ 210C tc= 0.23 MPa
R, Radius of the roll Velocity Extremum V1 y Velocity Extremum 2h x V2 Case-a Case-b Pmax
V1>V2 V1>V2 V1 V1 V2 V2 Case-d: No velocity extremum exists in the nip Case-c: No velocity extremum exists in the nip V1<V2 V1<V2 V1 V1 V2 V2 Case-e: No velocity extremum exists in the nip Case-f: No velocity extremum exists in the nip
Conveying Roll surface Feed Roll surface
R, Radius of the roll Velocity Extremum V1 y Velocity Extremum 2h x V2 Case-a Case-b Pmax
Maximum pressure Atmospheric pressure
White regions are partially detached Islands of detachments appear when both rolls turn at the same relatively high speed
Material detaches from feed roll when the rolls turn at relatively large differential speeds
Conveying Roll surface Feed Roll surface
Conveying Roll surface Feed Roll surface
Run Nr. Material Temperature oC Wall thickness mm Feed roll RPM Conveying roll RPM Nip shear stress on feed roll, Pa 1 164 2.3 16 29 2.23 105 2 164 2.2 20 33 2.46 105 3 162 1.65 40 40 2.47 105 4 162 1.61 33 33 1.9 105 Typical results
Conclusions: • The onset of strong wall slip at a critical shear stress of 0.22 MPa (documented with the steady torsional flow) for the HDPE coincides with the shear stress at which detachment of the melt from the feed roll occurs during shear roll mill process. • The material detaches uniformly everywhere along the rolls if both rolls turn at high speeds with a relatively large speed differential, while only islands of detachment appear if the roll turn at the same high speed. • Temperature and surface roughness are the two factors that determine which roll the melt will stick onto.
Conclusions • These findings here can be used to select operating conditions and geometry for the shear roll milling operations and for process control. • However, for the gun propellants the rheological behavior and hence the wall slip behavior is going to change with the moisture content and this important effect needs to be kept track of.
We are grateful for the funding of the US Army • TACOM/ARDEC under DAAE30-01-C-1039 • and the contributions of: • C. Topolski, S. Rosenberg, E. Krajowski, • and B. Elmasri of US Army • Mr. J. Kowalczyk of Shear Tool and Mr. J. Graybill of MPR • H. Zeigler of ATK Thiokol Propulsion and • A. Wellm of Nitrochemie