Abstract
Abstract The origin of the maximum of the birefringence at the surface of injection-molded polymer products is discussed. By systematic variation of the molding conditions with polycarbonate, it is shown that the maximum at the surface not only depends on the filling, but even more so on the packing conditions. The birefringence at the surface is equal in the flow direction and transverse to it. The height scales with the cavity pressure during compression and packing. This cannot be explained by stresses due to the classical fountain flow at the flow front. Instead, the dominating contribution comes from transient deviatoric stresses induced by the compression of the vitrifying polymer in combination with wall adhesion. The pressure-induced stress history in the vitrifying polymer leads to molecular orientation and residual stresses giving a birefringence maximum at the surface.
Published Version
Talk to us
Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have