Title of article :
Injection-moulded α- and β-polypropylenes: I. Structure vs. processing parameters
Author/Authors :
Roman ?erm?k، نويسنده , , Martin Obadal، نويسنده , , Petr Pon??il، نويسنده , , Martina Pol??kov?، نويسنده , , Karel Stoklasa، نويسنده , ,
Anezka Lengalova، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2005
Abstract :
The paper studies the effects of mould temperature and holding pressure on the structure of neat and β-nucleated isotactic polypropylenes. Commercially available isotactic polypropylene was modified with a β-specific nucleator based on N,N′-dicyclohexylnaphthalene-2,6-dicarboxamide in the concentration of 0.03 wt.%. From both the original material (α-iPP) and the β-nucleated material (β-iPP), dog bone-shaped test specimens were injection-moulded, using two sets of processing parameters. In the T-set the mould temperature was varied within the range of 40–120 °C in 10 °C steps, while in the P-set the holding pressure was changed from 5 to 13 MPa in 1 MPa steps. Other processing parameters were kept on the same level. Polarized-light microscopy showed a strong effect of mould temperature on the morphology of α-iPP specimens; the skin thinned out and the spherulite size increased with mould temperature rise. On the other hand, in the case of β-iPP only the skin thickness was correspondingly affected, while the spherulite size remained virtually constant, independent of the mould temperature changes. At the same structure level, both α-iPP and β-iPP specimens were insensitive to holding pressure variations. Polymorphic composition derived from wide-angle X-ray scattering displayed similar range of changes induced by variations of the processing parameters for both materials. The increase of mould temperature positively influenced the crystallinity and the β-form content, particularly in the skin of specimens. On the contrary, higher holding pressure depressed the crystallinity proportionally within the bulk of specimens.
Keywords :
?-form , Specific nucleation , Processing parameters , Polypropylene , Skin-core morphology , ?-form
Journal title :
European Polymer Journal(EPJ)
Journal title :
European Polymer Journal(EPJ)