Note: English will be used in all lectures and course notes. However, questions may be asked in German, French, Spanish, or Greek. Dr. Vlachopoulos will translate the questions and will give the answers in English for the benefit of everyone.
9:00 - 9:30 -- Welcome & Registration
9:30 - 12:30 -- Introduction to Rheology
Unusual rheological phenomena exhibited by polymer solutions and melts. The importance of rheology in polymer processing. Viscosity, melt flow index and melt strength, and their relation to molecular structure. The role of temperature, pressure, additives, and fillers. The Dow Rheology Index for Insite technology polyolefins. Rheology of metallocene polymers.
12:30 - 14:00 -- Lunch
14:00 - 17:30 -- Rheology for Process Optimization
Shear and normal stresses. Viscoelasticity. Stress relaxation. Extensional viscosity. G' and G" measurement and significance in polymer characterization. The role of rheology in mixing and blending. Rheological modifications by blending certain polymers, such as LLDPE and LDPE. Determination of MWD from rheological measurements. Predicting processability from rheology. Viscosity of suspensions. Rheology of wood plastics composites (WPCs). Rheology of some nanocomposites. Problem solving using rheology.
9:00 - 12:30 -- Melt Flow Through Dies, Extrudate Swell, Die Lip Build-up, Sharkskin and Melt Fracture
Unidirectional and multidimensional flows. Pressure drop and frictional heating (viscous dissipation). The mechanisms responsible for extrudate swell. Die lip build-up (drool) causes and remedies. Relation to molecular structure. Causes for the onset of sharkskin and gross melt fracture. The effects of adhesion and slip. The role of additives and processing aids. Recent theories and their application to process improvement.
12:30 - 14:00 -- Lunch
14:00 - 17:30 -- Extrusion and Troubleshooting
Principles of solids conveying, melting, mixing and melt pumping in single screw extrusion. Simple formulas for calculation of Throughput, Power and Torque. Screw design considerations and review of modern designs. Conventional versus barrier screws. Screws with mixing elements. Dies for extrusion and coextrusion. Surging, gels, screw and barrel wear, the role of moisture, interfacial instabilities, weldlines, MD Flow lines, and thickness non-uniformities. Systematic fault diagnosis and troubleshooting.
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POLYDYNAMICS, INC.
Phone: (905) 592-3507 Fax: (647) 436-7847
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