Abstract/Details

In Situ Observation of Plastic Foaming under Static Condition, Extensional Flow and Shear Flow

Wong, Anson Sze Tat.   University of Toronto (Canada) ProQuest Dissertations & Theses,  2012. NR97502.

Abstract (summary)

Traditional blowing agents (e.g., hydrochlorofluorocarbons) in plastic foaming processes has been phasing out due to environmental regulations. Plastic foaming industry is forced to employ greener alternatives (e.g., carbon dioxide, nitrogen), but their foaming processes are technologically challenging. Moreover, to improve the competitiveness of the foaming industry, it is imperative to develop a new generation of value-added plastic foams with cell structures that can be tailored to different applications. In this context, the objective of this thesis is to achieve a thorough understanding on cell nucleation and growth phenomena that determine cell structures in plastic foaming processes. The core research strategy is to develop innovative visualization systems to capture and study these phenomena. A system with accurate heating and cooling control has been developed to observe and study crystallization-induced foaming behaviors of polymers under static conditions. The cell nucleation and initial growth behavior of polymers blown with different blowing agents (nitrogen, argon and helium, and carbon dioxide-nitrogen mixtures) have also been investigated in great detail. Furthermore, two innovative systems have been developed to simulate the dynamic conditions in industrial foaming processes: one system captures a foaming process under an easily adjustable and uniform extensional strain in a high temperature and pressure environment, while the other achieves the same target, but with shear strain. Using these systems, the extensional and shear effects on bubble nucleation and initial growth processes has been investigated independently in an isolated manner, which has never been achieved previously. The effectiveness of cell nucleating agents has also been evaluated under dynamic conditions, which have led to the identification of new foaming mechanisms based on polymer-chain alignment and generation of microvoids under stress. Knowledge generated from these researches and the wide range of future studies made possible by the visualization systems will be valuable to the development of innovative plastic foaming technologies and foams.

Indexing (details)


Subject
Materials science;
Plastics
Classification
0794: Materials science
0795: Plastics
Identifier / keyword
Applied sciences; Cell nucleation; Extensional stress; Plastic foaming; Shear stress; Visualization
Title
In Situ Observation of Plastic Foaming under Static Condition, Extensional Flow and Shear Flow
Author
Wong, Anson Sze Tat
Number of pages
244
Degree date
2012
School code
0779
Source
DAI-B 74/08(E), Dissertation Abstracts International
ISBN
978-0-494-97502-2
Advisor
Park, Chul B.
University/institution
University of Toronto (Canada)
Department
Mechanical and Industrial Engineering
University location
Canada -- Ontario, CA
Degree
Ph.D.
Source type
Dissertation or Thesis
Language
English
Document type
Dissertation/Thesis
Dissertation/thesis number
NR97502
ProQuest document ID
1350263265
Copyright
Database copyright ProQuest LLC; ProQuest does not claim copyright in the individual underlying works.
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/docview/1350263265