Department of Chemistry Master Calendar

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This calendar includes all events from the following individual calendars: Department of Chemistry Alumni Events (events for an alumni audience), Department Events (events of general interest and/or relevant to all Chemistry research areas), Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Events, Public Events, and events related to Chemistry research areas and programs (Analytical Chemistry, Chemical Biology, Chemistry-Biology Interface Training Program, Inorganic Chemistry & Materials Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Physical Chemistry), as well as Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering Seminars & Events.

 

CHBE 565 Seminar, Prof. Ralph Colby, Penn State University, "Flow-Induced Crystallization of Engineering Thermoplastics"

Event Type
Seminar/Symposium
Sponsor
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering and International Paper Co.
Location
116 Roger Adams Laboratory
Date
Dec 3, 2019   2:00 pm  
Contact
Christy Bowser
E-Mail
cbowser@illinois.edu
Views
110
Originating Calendar
Chemical & Biomolecular Engineering - Seminars and Events

Brief intervals of shear flow at rates exceeding the reciprocal of the Rouse time of the longest chains create precursors that nucleate orders of magnitude more crystals and change the morphology from ~30 μm spherulites to far smaller ~1 μm crystallites.  This flow-induced crystallization (FIC) at low shear rates builds with shearing time and eventually saturates.  In contrast, at much higher stress levels that might occur in processing flows, a second morphology transition to shish-kebabs is observed when a critical shear stress (~0.14 MPa for iPP) is exceeded.  The shish-kebab transition is evident in subsequent oscillatory shear as a weak gel and as a sudden jump in the pressure needed to push the material through the die in capillary rheometry. Flow-induced crystallization is studied in detail for isotactic polypropylenes and poly(ether ether ketone)s representing flexible and semi-rigid polymers, and for Polyamide 6,6 representing a flexible polymer with strong hydrogen bonding, to see which aspects of FIC are universal to all polymers and which aspects are polymer-specific.  The fact that the precursors are quite stable allows the sheared samples to be removed from the rheometer and studied extensively with DSC and optical microscopy, while annealing at elevated temperatures allows the study of precursor stability.

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