Abstract

This article studied the dripping behavior of eight polymers under UL94 vertical test conditions. The results suggested two different dripping behaviors: Type I, dripping with uniform- and small-sized drops with the short first dripping time, and Type II, dripping with irregular- and large-sized drops with the long first dripping time. Polymers of Type I dripping had dominant decomposition mechanism of random-chain scission, low activation energy of viscous flow, and high ratio of effective heat of combustion to heat of gasification. Otherwise, Type II dripping dominates. The surface tension at ambient temperature and the melt flow index at processing temperatures were not as important to dripping as expected. It was found that talc could convert the dripping of low-density polyethylene from Type I to Type II at a critical talc loading level of 20 wt%, which was ascribed to the reduction in the burning rate and the formation of an integral residue. Finally, a generalized model was presented, and a derived correlation showed that the drop mass was a power law function of the dripping time.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call