Title: EBB 2203 ENGINEERING POLYMER
1EBB 220/3ENGINEERING POLYMER
- DR AZURA A.RASHID
- Room 2.19
- School of Materials And Mineral Resources
Engineering, - Universiti Sains Malaysia, 14300 Nibong Tebal, P.
Pinang - Malaysia
2COURSE CONTENT
- Introduction
- Principle of viscoelasticity
- Polymer failure (short term long term)
- Polymer Rheology
- Polymer types additives
- Polymer processing methods
- Elastomer (rubber)
- Advanced Polymeric materials
- Polymer Composites
3REFERENCES
- R J Young and P A Lovell, Introduction to
Polymers, Chapman Hall, 1992. - R J Crawford, Plastics Engineering, Pergamon
Press, 1990. - D H Morton-Jones, Polymer Processing, Chapman
Hall, 1989. - N G McCrum, C P Buckley, C B Bucknall, Principles
of Polymer Engineering, Oxford/ University Press,
1988. - R Moore, D E Kline, Properties and Processing of
Polymers for Engineers, Prentice-Hall, 1984. - P C Powell, Engineering with Polymers, Chapman
and Hall, 1983.
4MARKING SCHEME
- Final Exams 70
- Test Assignment 30
- Contribution
- Dr Azlan 15
- Dr Azura 15
-
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- Final Exams 7 Question ? answer 5
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5SOME THOUGHT
- What you understand about polymer?
- Why it is important?
6EBB 220/3INTRODUCTION
- DR AZURA A.RASHID
- Room 2.19
- School of Materials And Mineral Resources
Engineering, - Universiti Sains Malaysia, 14300 Nibong Tebal, P.
Pinang - Malaysia
7WHAT IS POLYMER??
- Polymers are made up of many many molecules all
strung together to form really long chains - This is a polymer. It is a large molecule
8- Poly- means "many" and -mer means "part" or
"segment". Mono means "one". So, monomers are
those molecules that can join together to make a
long polymer chain. - Many many many MONOmers make a POLYmer! usually a
single polymer molecule is made out of hundreds
of thousands (or even millions!) of monomers! - Sometimes polymers are called "macromolecules" -
"macro" means "large" ? polymers must be very
large molecules - The chemical reactions which monomers joined
together to form polymer are called
polymerization reactions
9DIFFERENCES BETWEEN MOLECULE MONOMER
10POLYMER SYNTHESIS
2 types of Polymerization
Addition polymerization
Condesation polymerization
11ADDITION POLYMERIZATION
Involves a simple addition of monomer molecules
to each other without the loss of any atoms from
the original molecule
NOTES It is possible to produce a saturated
long chain polymer from unsaturated monomer
12CONDENSATION POLYMERIZATION
Involves a reaction between bifunctional
reactants in which a small molecule is eliminated
during each step of the polymer building reaction
13MOLECULAR WEIGHT OF POLYMERS
- The molecular weight of one single macromolecule
is equal to the molecular weight of the repeating
unit multiplied by number of repeating unit (n)
in the molecule. - The molecular weight of Polyethylene (PE) ? can
be calculated from the formula (C2H4)n 28. If n
1000 ? the molecular weight of PE will be 2800. - The molecular weight of PE can be vary from below
2000 to above one million according to
polymerization reaction conditions. - Some polymers consists of macromolecules with
different molecular weight ? average molecular
weight will be used to describe their molecular
weight.
14Homopolymer
Polymer consisting of multiples of the same
repeating units as Polyethylene
Copolymer
Resulted products from two different monomers
(e,g A and B) polymerized together
Terpolymers
Polymers obtained from three different monomers
(e.g. A, B and C)
15TYPES OF COPOLYMER
Random copolymer
Graft Copolymer
-A-B-B-A-A-B-A-B-
-A-A-A-A-A-A B B B
Alternating copolymer
-A-B-A-B-A-B-A-B-
Block copolymer
-A-A-A-B-B-B-A-A-A-B-B-B
16CONFIGURATIONS OF MACROMOLECULES
- The polymer chain may be linear, Branched or
crosslinked. - The properties of polymer depend mainly on
- the length and configuration of the
macromolecules, - the extent of interaction among them and
- the presence or absence of functional group.
17CONFIGURATIONS OF MACROMOLECULES
Linear
Branched
Crosslinked
18Polymer can be divided into 4 groups according to
their deformation properties in the solid state
Plastomers (thermoplastic)
Thermoset (Duromers)
ThermoplasticElastomer (TPe)
Elastomer (vulcanized rubbers)
19Plastomer (Thermoplastics)
- Polyethylene (PE), Polystyrene (PS) and PVC
consist of entangled or branched macromolecules
held together by intermolecular forces - In the solid state they deform permanently and do
not recover after complete release of the force
producing the deformation. - This is because their macromolecules are loose
and can slip past each other on the application
of pressure.
20- Plastomer are usually supplied in granular or
pelleted form can be repeatedly softened by
heating and hardened by cooling within a
temperature range characteristic of each plastic. - In the softened state ? can be shaped into
articles by moulding or extrusion. - The change upon heating is substantially
physical ? scrap or reject parts can be
reprocessed. - Plastomer can be dissolved in suitable solvents
regain their properties when the solvent is
evaporated.
21Elastomer (vulcanized rubbers)
- Elastic materials that recover to almost their
original shape after complete release of the
applied force. - They are insoluable and infusible ? can be swell
only in solvents such as benzene and methyl ethyl
ketone and decompose when heated far beyond the
maximum service temperature. - The unique properties because the macromolecules
are crosslinked by chemical bonds.
22- The crosslinks prevent the long chain molecules
from slipping past each other on the application
of force from dissolving in solvents or melting
by heating. - The number of crosslinks can be increased until a
rigid network results as in the case of hard
rubber (ebonit). - Elastomer are produced from crude rubbers ? in
which a variety of compounding ingredients are
incorporated. - The obtained rubber mixtures are usually tacky,
thermoplastic and soluble in strong solvents.
23- During vulcanization ? the chain molecules of the
crude rubber are joined by widely spaced
crosslinks. - After having been crosslinks ? the soft
plastic-like material exhibits a high degree of
elastic recovery, losses its tackiness, becomes
insoluble in solvents infusible when heated and
more resistant to deterioration caused by aging
factors. - Scrap or reject parts cannot be processed unless
the crosslinks have been destroyed by chemical or
mechanical processes.
24Thermoplastic Elastomer (TPe)
- Block copolymer that possess elastic properties
within a certain range of temperature e.g from
room temperature -70C. - The elastic properties are due to physical
crosslinks resulting from secondary
intermolecules forces such as hydrogen bonding. - These crosslinks disappear when heated above
certain temperature and reform immediately on
cooling to develop elastic properties.
25- Thermoplastic elastomers fill the gap between non
crosslinked plastomers and the chemically
crosslinked elastomer. - They can be processed even reprocessed in the
manner of thermoplastic materials without
vulcanization. - Some thermoplastic elastomers can be dissolved in
common solvents regain their properties when
the solvent is evaporated.
26TERMOSET (Duromer)
Thermosets (duromers)
- Phenolic resins, urea melamine plastics ? are
rigid materials that are produced from certain
reactants. - By heating, they undergo a chemical change in
which space network molecules are formed similar
to vulcanization of rubber mixtures. - The macromolecules are much tightly crosslinked
than those of elastomer. - After been crosslinked ? there are infusible and
insoluble and the scrap or reject parts cannot be
reprocessed.
27CONFIGURATIONS OF POLYMER TYPES
28Crystalline Amorphous structure of polymers
- Some polymers are almost completely amorphous
under normal condition but may become crystalline
when stretched or when conditioned in certain low
temperatures ranges. - The term crystalline ? to describe a polymer
processing both crystalline and amorphous
regions. - Those regions are not mechanically separable
phases ? the same macromolecules may at the same
region ? semicrystalline
29- Some elastomer particularly crosslinked natural
rubbers ? have an ability to undergo this kind of
crystallization when stretched. - Under the extension force ? the chain molecules
are oriented in the direction of pull. - Many properties of polymers such as hardness,
modulus, tensile strength and solubility ? are
affected by the degree of crystallinity in the
polymer. - Those polymers which do not have the ability to
crystallize on stretching exhibit inferior
tensile strength.
30Crystalline region
Amorphous region
31EBB 220/3POLYMER IN ENGINEERING
- DR AZURA A.RASHID
- Room 2.19
- School of Materials And Mineral Resources
Engineering, - Universiti Sains Malaysia, 14300 Nibong Tebal, P.
Pinang - Malaysia
32WHY POLYMERS
- Within polymers, there are various subgroups
which within each subgroup there are many
individual polymers each having its own
individual portfolio of properties. - Pure polymers are hardly used on their own to
make articles or product because polymers have a
number of limiting features. - Commonly to use compounds made from polymers and
ingredients (additives) selected to confer
desirable characteristics. - Plastic referring ? plastic polymer additives
- Rubber referring ? elastomer additives
33Radial tyres for car wheels
- Vehicle tyres account for more than half the
total use of rubber (combination of SBR and
natural rubber) - The rubber in tyre has the following general
characteristics - Corrosion resistance adequate resistance to
water, petrol, oil salt - Insulation thick walled tyres tend to get warm
especially if under inflated - Fatigue resistance excellent
- Toughness Adequate resists crack growth provided
the rubber is protected from oxidative
degradation
34- Flexibility Modulus 1 MPa, grips road and seals
to wheel rim - Energy absorption a smooth, quiet ride over
rough surfaces (part of the suspension system) - Lubrication Water is a superb lubricant for
rubber road holding relies on efficient thread
design to squeeze water out of the way. - Orientation of plies Selected to confer desired
road holding, suspension and steering
characteristics. - Low density light weight construction
- Complicated shape achieved with repeatable
precision
35Plastics pipes fitting
- About 10 of all pipes and fitting are made from
plastics mainly thermoplastics pipe. - Thermoplastics used in pipes have the following
general characteristics - Low density easy to transport and install.
- Corrosion resistance minimal maintenance,
negligible build-up of scale and able to resist
aggressive media (by suitable choice of plastic). - Insulation low thermal conductivity or build in
lagging, low electrical conductivity possible
hazard in pumping non-conducting powders - Easy to make by extrusion of polymer melt
through die -
36- Colour coded some plastic are transparent too.
- Expansion thermal expansion must be allowed for
in design of the pipe system. - Flammability the hydrocarbon nature of polymers
ensures that all polymers will burn, some more
readily than others. - Temperature the service range is from -5C. Most
plastics can cope with 50C, relatively few with
100C under prolonged pressure, one or two
survive 200C. - Stiffness modulus of the order of few GPa or
less - Strength yield stress usually less than 20 MPa
- Toughness in the range 1-3 MPa, less under
cyclic or prolonged load, able to withstand
normal use.
37General properties of polymers
- Density Typically 800-1500 kg/m3 for uniform
polymers, foamed or cellular polymers down to 10
kg/m3, heavily filled polymers to about 300 kg/m3
- Insulation Outstanding insulation, exploited in
wire covering and capacitor dielectrics. - Expansion coefficient At about room temperature,
linear expansion coefficient in the approximate
range 60-200x10-6 K-1 - Burning All polymers can be destroyed by flame
or excessive heat. The rate of destruction
depends on the type of polymer, the surface to
volume ratio, the temperature, and the duration
of exposure to heat
38- Dimensional stability A few polymers can absorb
some liquids, causing swelling or even
dissolution, accompanied by changes in physical
properties. - Natural rubber readily absorbs large quantities
of hydrocarbons liquids - Nylon absorbs moisture in small quantities,
- Chemical resistance Can be very good but must be
depend on the chemical nature of the polymers. - Example polymer hydrocarbon such as
polyethylene are not compatible with hydrocarbon
oils. - Some polymers are not oil resistant..
39Some special features of rubber
- Reversible high extensibility For example up to
several hundred percent in gum natural rubber
vulcanizates stretched above Tg - Modulus typically about 106 N/m2
- Energy absorption There is massive area under
the stress-strain curve, even though the modulus
is low, which provides a large capacity for
strain energy. - Fatigue resistance For example tyre behaviour.
- Toughness Good resistance to crack growth under
cyclic loading if the rubber is protected from
oxidative degradation.
40Some special features of plastics
- Modulus About 109 (N/m2)Pa or less
- Range of toughness Some plastic are tough e,g
low density polyethylene, some fragile e.g
general purpose polystyrene. - Friction coefficient Unlubricated, some polymers
have coefficients of about 0.3-0.5 - PTFE rubbing on itself about 0.2
- Some soft plastics just adhere.
41- 4. Temperature range
- Amorphous Plastic are not used above Tg.
- Partially crystalline used mainly between Tg and
fairly well below Tm and some are used a little
below Tg. - 5. Appearance
- Amorphous Plastic can be very transparent,
- Partially crystalline ones can be translucent or
opaque - Colour plastics with dyes or pigments
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