Polymer-polymer interfacial slip in multilayered films

Patrick C. Lee, Hee Eon Park, David C. Morse, Christopher W. MacOsko

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Abstract

Significant slip can occur in the flow of a blend of two immiscible polymers due to reduced entanglements at their interface. The slip is of practical importance because of its effect on morphology and adhesion in, for example, disordered two-phase blends or multilayer films. Interfacial slip was quantified using two polymer pairs each with closely matched viscosity and elasticity but different miscibility (): polypropylene (PP)/polystyrene (PS) =0.04 and polyethylene (PE)/fluoropolymer (FP) 0.1. To control the amount of interfacial area, we prepared alternating layers by coextrusion. The number of layers of PP/PS ranged from 20 to 640 while that for PE/FP was 80. Nominal viscosity of the multilayer samples was measured with three types of rheometers: an in-line slit-die rheometer, rotational parallel-disks, and sliding plate. Good agreement was found between the three methods. The nominal viscosity as well as shear normal stresses of the multilayer samples decreased with the number of layers. From the viscosity reduction, an apparent interfacial slip velocity Vslip was calculated. The detectable slip, about 1 μm/s, occurred at the same level of stress normalized by average plateau modulus τ/ G N,av 0 =0.01 for both pairs. However, Vslip did not show a sudden increase at a critical shear stress as predicted by Brochard-Wyart and de Gennes [C. R. Acad. Sci., Ser. II: Mec., Phys., Chim., Sci. Terre Univers 317, 13 (1993)] but rather increased Vslip τ n, where n≈3 for PS/PP and n≈6 for PE/FP. The steeper dependence of slip on stress for PE/FP may be related to its higher value and with its narrower molecular weight distribution.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)893-915
Number of pages23
JournalJournal of Rheology
Volume53
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2009

Bibliographical note

Funding Information:
This research was supported by the National Science Foundation Sponsored Materials Research Science and Engineering Center at the University of Minnesota (MRSEC). The authors are pleased to acknowledge Kurt Koppi (Dow Chemical Co.), Claude Lavallee (Dyneon 3M), and Adriana S. Silva (ExxonMobil) for supplying polymers for this research. The authors also would like to acknowledge David Giles (Polymer Service Center, University of Minnesota) for fruitful discussions.

Keywords

  • Coextrusion
  • Fluoropolymer
  • Interfacial slip
  • Sliding plate rheometer

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