Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Polymer Processing
- 2 Fundamentals
- 3 Extrusion
- 4 Temperature and Pressure Effects in Flow
- 5 The Thin Gap Approximation
- 6 Quasi-Steady Analysis of Mold Filling
- 7 Fiber Spinning
- 8 Numerical Simulation
- 9 Polymer Melt Rheology
- 10 Viscoelasticity in Processing Flows
- 11 Stability and Sensitivity
- 12 Wall Slip and Extrusion Instabilities
- 13 Structured Fluids
- 14 Mixing and Dispersion
- Postface
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Plate section
Postface
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- 1 Polymer Processing
- 2 Fundamentals
- 3 Extrusion
- 4 Temperature and Pressure Effects in Flow
- 5 The Thin Gap Approximation
- 6 Quasi-Steady Analysis of Mold Filling
- 7 Fiber Spinning
- 8 Numerical Simulation
- 9 Polymer Melt Rheology
- 10 Viscoelasticity in Processing Flows
- 11 Stability and Sensitivity
- 12 Wall Slip and Extrusion Instabilities
- 13 Structured Fluids
- 14 Mixing and Dispersion
- Postface
- Author Index
- Subject Index
- Plate section
Summary
This is the conclusion of the book, and an appropriate point to look back and reflect. Our goal throughout has been to establish the foundations of polymer melt processing in fluid mechanics and heat transfer without introducing unnecessary complexity. In doing so we have avoided geometrical detail of the equipment; such detail is important for specific applications, but its inclusion adds little to our overall understanding of the essential interplay between fluid mechanics and heat transfer in basic process performance, which was our primary objective. Similarly, we initially developed the subject in terms of the flow of inelastic liquids; many polymer processes are characterized by a low Deborah number, either as a consequence of the nature of the flow or the properties of the polymer being processed, and the essential behavior in this case does not depend on the fact that the melt is viscoelastic. We subsequently introduced viscoelasticity for those applications where it is needed, using viscoelastic constitutive equations that have been found to be effective in describing melt flow in complex geometries but fall short of the state of the art in polymer rheology. Viscoelasticity can be quite significant in some processing situations, notably in steady flows with substantial elongation and in all flows when dynamical response is of interest, and the rôle of viscoelasticity – when it is important and when it is not – must be understood for a complete and accurate picture.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Polymer Melt ProcessingFoundations in Fluid Mechanics and Heat Transfer, pp. 239 - 240Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2008