Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.52, No.3, 649-662, 2012
Capillary flow of low-density polyethylene
The capillary flow of a commercial low-density polyethylene (LDPE) melt was studied both experimentally and numerically. The excess pressure drop due to entry (Bagley correction), the compressibility, the effect of pressure on viscosity, and the possible slip effects on the capillary data analysis have been examined. Using a series of capillary dies having different diameters, D, and length-to-diameter L/D ratios, a full rheological characterization has been carried out, and the experimental data have been fitted both with a viscous model (Carreau-Yasuda) and a viscoelastic one (the KayeBernstein, Kearsley, Zapas/Papanastasiou, Scriven, Macosko, or K-BKZ/PSM model). Particular emphasis has been given on the pressure-dependence of viscosity, with a pressure-dependent coefficient beta p. For the viscous model, the viscosity is a function of both temperature and pressure. For the viscoelastic K-BKZ model, the time-temperature shifting concept has been used for the non-isothermal calculations, while the timepressure shifting concept has been used to shift the relaxation moduli for the pressure-dependence effect. It was found that only the viscoelastic simulations were capable of reproducing the experimental data well, while any viscous modeling always underestimates the pressures, especially at the higher apparent shear rates and L/D ratios. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 2012. (c) 2012 Society of Plastics Engineers