Degradation of LDPE LLDPE and HOPE in film extrusion

Abstract

The degradation of different polyethylenes, LDPE, LLDPE, and HDPE, with and without antioxidants and at different oxygen concentrations in the polymer granulates have been studied in extrusion coating processing. The degradation was followed by On Line Rheometry, Size Exclusion Chromatography, Surface Oxidation Index measurements, and GC-MS Chromatography. The degradations starts in the extruder where primary radicals are formed which are subject the auto oxidation when oxygen is present. In the extruder, cross-linking and chain scission reactions are dominating at low and high melt temperatures, respectively, for LDPE, and chain scission is over all dominating for the more linear LLDPE and HDPE resins. Additives such as antioxidants react with primary radicals formed in the melt. Degradation taking place in the film between the die orifice and the quenching point is mainly related to the exposure time to air-oxygen. Melt temperatures above 28

    Similar works

    Full text

    thumbnail-image