Abstract

AbstractA study has been carried out on the influence of cold drawing (25°C), hot drawing (140°C), and annealing (140°C) on the structure and mechanical properties of a series of four different well‐characterized melt spun polypropylene filaments. The influence of the interaction between melt spinning and drawing variables was given special attention. Cold drawing increased the orientation in the samples, disrupts the initial monoclinic crystal structure and the morphology of the filaments, and it results in extensive fibrillation. Annealing restored the monoclinic structure but eliminated only a small part of the fibrillation. Hot drawing produced changes which were qualitatively similar to the combined effects of cold drawing and annealing. The orientation and morphology of the asspun filaments were found to have major effects on drawing behavior and the mechanical properties of the drawn fibers for a given draw ratio. It was found, however, that the mechanical properties (tensile strength, tangent elastic modulus, and elongation to break) of the melt spun, hot drawn and cold drawn, and annealed fibers could all be correlated with birefringence measurements.

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