Abstract

The transient uniaxial elongational viscosity of BASF Lupolen 1840D and 3020D melts has been measured on a filament stretch rheometer up to Hencky strains of 6–7. The elongational viscosity of both melts was measured at 130°C within a broad range of elongational rates. At high elongation rates, an overshoot or maximum in the transient elongational viscosity followed by a steady viscosity was observed. The steady elongation viscosity was about 40%–50% less than the maximum at high strain rates. The steady elongational viscosity as a function of the elongation rate, ϵ̇, decreases approximately as ϵ̇−0.6 in both melts at high strain rates. The transient elongational viscosity, measured at a specific elongation rate at 170°C on the BASF Lupolen 3020D melt, did not follow the time temperature superposition principle based on linear viscoelasticity during the decrease in the transient elongational viscosity towards the steady state.

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