Abstract
AbstractAn experimental study of steady shear and elongational flow Theological properties of a series of polypropylene melts of varying molecular weight and distribution is reported. Broadening the molecular weight distribution increases the non‐Newtonian character of the shear viscosity function and increases the principal normal stress differences at fixed shear stress. The behavior is compared to earlier rheological property‐molecular weight studies. Correlations are developed for these properties in terms of molecular structure. Elongational flow studies indicate that for commercial and broader molecular weight distribution samples, ready failure by neck development occurs and the elongational viscosity appears to decrease with increasing elongation rate. For narrower molecular weight distribution samples, the elongational viscosity is an increasing function of elongation rate, The implication of these experimental results to viscoelastic fluid constitutive equations and polymer melt processing is developed.
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