While existing foam studies have identified processing parameters, such as high-pressure drop rate, and engineering measures, such as high melt strength, as key factors for improving foamability, there is a conspicuous absence of studies that directly relate foamability to material properties obtained from fundamental characterization. To bridge this gap, this work presents batch foaming studies on one linear and two long-chain branched polypropylene (PP) resins to investigate how foamability is affected by partial melting (Method 1) and complete melting followed by undercooling (Method 2). At temperatures above the melting point, similar expansion was obtained using both foaming procedures within each resin, while the PP with the highest strain hardening ratio (13) exhibited the highest expansion ratio (45 ± 3). At low temperatures, the foamability of all resins was dramatically improved using Method 2 compared to Method 1, due to access to lower foaming temperatures (<150 °C) near the crystallization onset. Furthermore, Method 2 resulted in a more uniform cellular structure over a wider temperature range (120–170 °C compared to 155–175 °C). Overall, strong extensional hardening and low onset of crystallization were shown to give rise to foamability at high and low temperatures, respectively, suggesting that both characteristics can be appropriately used to tune the foamability of PP in industrial foaming applications.
The nonlinear rheological response to extensional flows
in entangled
polymers is related to the segmental chain stretching and to the chemical
identity of the monomeric units. The latter has a strong effect on
the drag coefficients, and therefore, quantification of molecular
conformation changes in the subnanometer scale (at the monomer level)
are crucial to fully understand nonlinear viscoelastic behavior in
polymer melts. We report in situ time-resolved extensional rheo-small-angle
neutron scattering (tEr-SANS) and wide-angle X-ray scattering (tEr-WAXS)
during startup of uniaxial flow on a monodisperse polystyrene melt.
Flow-induced segmental alignment was quantified with tEr-SANS, whereas
local alignment of the backbone–backbone and phenyl–phenyl
interactions were measured with tEr-WAXS. Linear relations between
the three alignment factors and stress were observed at low stresses,
which confirmed the validity of simple stress-SANS and stress-WAXS
rules (SSR and SWR, respectively). Significant differences in SSR
and SWR coefficients, as well as the stress values for failure of
the two rules suggest very different correlations between global (at
the segmental level) and local (at the monomer level) conformations
with stress.
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