Top Banner
Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics MFG 355
62
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic MaterialsEngineering Plastics

MFG 355

Page 2: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Engineering Thermoplastics

• Replace metallic parts– Strength and stiffness– Retention of properties over range of temperatures– Toughness to withstand incidental damage– Dimensional stability

• Low creep• Low CTE

– Withstand environmental factors (UV, O2, chemicals)– Shaped easily

Page 3: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Engineering Thermoplastics

• Compared to commodity plastics– More expensive– The commodity resins are all lacking some

critical property– Some Engineering Thermoplastics are formed

through the condensation polymerization process

Page 4: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polyamides or Nylons (PA)

Page 5: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

( )n[ ]a [ ]b

Polyamides or Nylons (PA)

[ ]a

[ ]b

Page 6: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

PA General Family Characteristics

• Polarity• Crystallinity• Sharp meltpoint• Strength• Comparison of higher & lower nylon

numbers

Page 7: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

PA General Family Characteristics

• Transparent (barely)—cook in bag (turkey)• Anti-friction—not like PTFE but good• Toughness—excellent• Fatigue resistance—excellent• Water absorption—a weakness (.2-2.5%—

must be dried for injection molding)• Highly crystalline

Page 8: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon 6,6

C C C C C CNH2 NH2

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Hexamethylenediamine(6 carbons)

Page 9: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon 6,6

C C C C C C

O

OH O

OHH

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Adipic Acid(6 carbons)

Page 10: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon 6,6

NH

C C C C C C

O OH

OCCCCCCNH2

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

O

H

H

WaterNylon 6,6

Page 11: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon 6

C C C C C CNH2

O

OH

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

AmineGroup

AcidGroup

Page 12: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon 6

CC

CC

CC

NH2

O

H

H

H

HH

H

H

H

H

H

NC

CC

CC

C

OH

O

H

HH

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

O

H

H

Water

Page 13: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties of Specific Nylon Types

• Nylon 6,6 – General• Nylon 6 – Copycat• Nylon 6,10 – Less water absorption• Nylon 6,12 – Flexibility and less water• Nylon 2,2 – Strength

Page 14: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Processing Nylon• Injection molding

– Shrinkage—crystallinity—.018 in/in– Dry it first

• Extrusion– Low melt viscosity– Be careful of decomposition

• Fibers– Drawing– Crystallization– Orientation

Page 15: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon History• Nature of polymer bonding not understood• Carothers• Difunctional monomers• Polymers—1000 units long

– Larger units—molecular still to eliminate water• Control of melting point and length

– Many combinations of polyesters– Trying polyamides– Settling on 6,6

• Carothers death– 3 weeks after patents

• Tremendous success– Name

• Delawear, Wacra, Norun, Nuron, Nulon, Nilon, Nylon

Page 16: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Aramids

Page 17: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Aramids

Page 18: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acetals or Polyoxymethylenes (POM)

Page 19: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acetals or Polyoxymethylenes (POM)

( )n

Page 20: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acetal General Family Characteristics

• Mechanical—do not embrittle, good impact strength

• Moisture—very little (shower heads)• Chemical resistance—very high, resists stains,

sensitive to strong acids and bases• Weathering—fair• Thermal—200o F• Electrical—good• Machining—like cutting brass• Adhesion—epoxy glues

Page 21: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Processing Acetals

• Do not heat above 440o F• Melt viscosity is not too dependant on

temperature

Page 22: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acetal Copolymer

(

(

n

Page 23: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic Polyesters (PET/PBT)

Page 24: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic Polyesters (PET/PBT)

(

)n

Page 25: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic Polyester General Family Characteristics

• PET– Higher mechanical stiffness– Strength by orienting chains not by H-bonding– Get 50% crystallinity

• forced by mechanical stretching

• PBT– crystallizes rapidly– processes faster– lower overall properties

Page 26: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Processing PET

• Shape it (film, tape, fiber, extrude, etc) – Amorphous structure

• Reheat and stretch in strength direction(s)• Cool to below Tg

Page 27: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Specific TP Polyester Types

• Dacron fiber—mix with cotton or wool-gives permanent creases

• Kodel – photo film• Mylar—transparencies, tapes• PETG—glycol modified, amorphous, like PVC

Page 28: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polycarbonate

Page 29: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polycarbonate

( )n

Page 30: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

History

• Solvent resistance (DuPont)• GE-Lexan• Properties

– Polar– Stiffness of backbone– Long repeat unit

Page 31: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties• Solvent sensitivity—poor but nice for joining• Clear—except for UV yellowing, slight

crystallinity• Hard• Ductile—nailed, sawed, drawn, punched,

sheared, drilled• Tough—helmets, light covers, windows,

roadside signs, bullet proof shields• Dimensional stability—low creep• Electrical resistance—good but not fantastic• Machining—good

Page 32: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acrylics (PAN, PMMA)

Page 33: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Acrylics (PAN, PMMA)

( )n ( )n

Page 34: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties

• Color (transparency)—20 years w/ <10% change

• Weathering—best• Mechanical properties—average except

for impact (brittle)• Chemical—chlorinated solvents attack it,

acetone gives it cracks• Electrical—good

Page 35: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Uses

• Signs• Counter tops—Corian• Decorative pieces• Floor waxes• Paint, fingernail polishes• Contact lenses, glasses

Page 36: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Processing

• Casting (sheets)—syrup• Injection molding—good• Thermoforming—ok but brittle• Machining—similar to wood

Page 37: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Flouropolymers (PTFE, FEP, PFA)

Page 38: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Flouropolymers (PTFE, FEP, PFA)

)n )n((

Page 39: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

History of Discovery

• Chambers plant– Making Freon– Gas cylinder

Page 40: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties

• Most are strengthened by the tight bond between the Fluorine and the Carbon atoms– Slippery (anti-stick surfaces)– Chemical inertness– High temperature melting– Non-flammable– High electrical resistance– Very dense—2.13-2.2 (high melt viscosity)

Page 41: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Uses

• O-rings• Non-stick surfaces• Insulation-electrical• Lubricant• Coatings• Gears

Page 42: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Processing• Not processable by extrusion or injection

molding– Sintering

• Put in approx shape and heat–620o F• Similar to processing powdered metals• Fusion

– Ram extrusion• Compaction• Rods and tubes

– Calendaring• Very poor adhesion

Page 43: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

High Performance Thermoplastics

Page 44: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

PPO Properties

• Thermal stability—excellent (650o F)• High HDT = 375o F• Good cold properties (-275o F)• Low water absorption• Low heat expansion• Good solvent resistance, but can be

solvent welded

Page 45: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

PPO uses

• Used to replace stainless steel for surgical equipment

• Replace thermosets• Pump housings• Valve components• Video terminal housings

Page 46: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polyaryletherketones (PEEK, PEK, and Others)

Page 47: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polyaryletherketones (PEEK, PEK, and Others)

Ether Linkage

Ketone Linkage

Page 48: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polysulfones (PSU and PES)

Page 49: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polysulfones (PSU and PES)

Page 50: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties

• Resistant to oils• Heat stability (300o F)• Creep resistance• SO2 group adds stiffness• More dimensionally stable than PPO• Toughness—good

Page 51: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Uses

• Hot water pipes• Coffee pots• Dishwasher components• Automobile applications near engines• Compete with thermosets, but can be

injection molded

Page 52: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic Polyimides (PI and PAI)

Page 53: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thermoplastic Polyimides (PI and PAI)

()n

)n

(

Page 54: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Properties

• Very stiff• Highest thermal stability• PI cannot be melted or melt processed• PAI can be (Torlon)• PI is sintered (Vespel)• PI film is cast as monomers and heated to

polymerize (Kapton)

Page 55: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Uses

• PI is used in circuit boards• High temperature parts• Low friction bearings, sliding parts• Gears

Page 56: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Cellulosics

Page 57: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Cellulosics

• Nitrocellulose– Gun cotton

• Cellulose nitrate– Lacquers and plastics

Page 58: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

• Fire• Hard

– Plasticized with camphor• Water repellent

•FireProperties

Page 59: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Types of Cellulosics

• Rayon– Viscose process

• Cellophane• Methyl cellulose

– Filler– Edible

Page 60: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Thank You

Page 61: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Nylon History

• Carothers– Iowa—BS – Illinois—PhD – Harvard—Teach – DuPont—basic research

Page 62: Thermoplastic Materials Engineering Plastics.ppt

Polyphenylenes (PPE, PPO, and PPS)

C

C

C

C

C

C

C

C

OHH

H

H H

H

H

H

HH

PPO