Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization

In polymer processing as fibre spinning, injection moulding, film casting and so on, the forming phase of the melt is followed by its solidification due to cooling. This implies the crystallization of the polymer during the processing. Typically, crystallites are formed and an ordered structure can...

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Main Authors: Claudia Carotenuto, Liana Pasqualina Paduano, Luigi Grassia, Mario Minale
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: AIDIC Servizi S.r.l. 2019-05-01
Series:Chemical Engineering Transactions
Online Access:https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9948
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spelling doaj-715b7919df934b4fbfcadf5e71c265562021-02-16T21:04:33ZengAIDIC Servizi S.r.l.Chemical Engineering Transactions2283-92162019-05-017410.3303/CET1974183Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During CrystallizationClaudia CarotenutoLiana Pasqualina PaduanoLuigi GrassiaMario MinaleIn polymer processing as fibre spinning, injection moulding, film casting and so on, the forming phase of the melt is followed by its solidification due to cooling. This implies the crystallization of the polymer during the processing. Typically, crystallites are formed and an ordered structure can be detected, if the cooling rate is not too high. As a consequence, during processing the rheological response of the material significantly changes from a liquid-like to a solid-like behaviour. The knowledge of the mechanical response of the material during crystallization is therefore of seminal importance for process control and modelling. We here focus on a random copolymer, the Ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), made of ethylene and varying amounts of vinyl acetate that interfere with poly-ethylene chain packing reducing the crystallinity, improving the transparency and lowering the melting temperature. This allows studying the crystallization kinetics at relatively low temperatures so to avoid all the experimental issues related to thermal degradation. The crystallization process is rheologically studied in non-isothermal conditions and the frequency spectra are measured at different temperatures to investigate the viscoelasticity of EVA during the change of phase. Coupling the crystallization kinetics and the viscoelastic spectra at different temperatures, i.e. at different degree of crystallinity, we determine two independent shift factors, one for the time-crystallinity shift, the other for the time-temperature shift, so to propose a new time-temperature-crystallinity superposition to reconcile all the data on a single master curve. In this way, the experimentally observable frequency range has been widen significantly so to detect all the relaxation times of the material from the shortest to the largest ones.https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9948
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Claudia Carotenuto
Liana Pasqualina Paduano
Luigi Grassia
Mario Minale
spellingShingle Claudia Carotenuto
Liana Pasqualina Paduano
Luigi Grassia
Mario Minale
Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
Chemical Engineering Transactions
author_facet Claudia Carotenuto
Liana Pasqualina Paduano
Luigi Grassia
Mario Minale
author_sort Claudia Carotenuto
title Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
title_short Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
title_full Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
title_fullStr Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
title_full_unstemmed Viscoelasticity Evolution of Ethylene-vinyl-acetate Copolymers During Crystallization
title_sort viscoelasticity evolution of ethylene-vinyl-acetate copolymers during crystallization
publisher AIDIC Servizi S.r.l.
series Chemical Engineering Transactions
issn 2283-9216
publishDate 2019-05-01
description In polymer processing as fibre spinning, injection moulding, film casting and so on, the forming phase of the melt is followed by its solidification due to cooling. This implies the crystallization of the polymer during the processing. Typically, crystallites are formed and an ordered structure can be detected, if the cooling rate is not too high. As a consequence, during processing the rheological response of the material significantly changes from a liquid-like to a solid-like behaviour. The knowledge of the mechanical response of the material during crystallization is therefore of seminal importance for process control and modelling. We here focus on a random copolymer, the Ethylene vinyl acetate (EVA), made of ethylene and varying amounts of vinyl acetate that interfere with poly-ethylene chain packing reducing the crystallinity, improving the transparency and lowering the melting temperature. This allows studying the crystallization kinetics at relatively low temperatures so to avoid all the experimental issues related to thermal degradation. The crystallization process is rheologically studied in non-isothermal conditions and the frequency spectra are measured at different temperatures to investigate the viscoelasticity of EVA during the change of phase. Coupling the crystallization kinetics and the viscoelastic spectra at different temperatures, i.e. at different degree of crystallinity, we determine two independent shift factors, one for the time-crystallinity shift, the other for the time-temperature shift, so to propose a new time-temperature-crystallinity superposition to reconcile all the data on a single master curve. In this way, the experimentally observable frequency range has been widen significantly so to detect all the relaxation times of the material from the shortest to the largest ones.
url https://www.cetjournal.it/index.php/cet/article/view/9948
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