Home
Scholarly Works
In Situ Rheological Measurement of an Aqueous...
Journal article

In Situ Rheological Measurement of an Aqueous Polyester Dispersion during Emulsification

Abstract

Rheological analysis of a complex fluid system like an aqueous polymer dispersion can be challenging but can reveal mechanistic information as the viscous melt is emulsified. A pressurized vessel was used as a rheometer, based on the Metzner–Otto approach, to evaluate formulation variables where the developed morphology of a polyester/water mixture was shear-dependent. The parameters of the study were resin-to-water ratio (R/W), surfactant (type and concentration), and process variables of impeller speed and temperature. Transient in situ information on the system during the mixing of water into the molten polymer showed that a rapid, near-instantaneous decrease in the torque on the impeller occurred consistently around 2% water addition, related to the onset of the developed morphological state. It was observed to only demonstrate a drop in the torque for high shear rates and only with the appropriate content of surface-active species, revealing the chemical and physical parameters necessary to emulsify the polyester melt.

Authors

Goger A; Thompson MR; Pawlak JL; Lawton DJW

Journal

Industrial & Engineering Chemistry Research, Vol. 54, No. 21, pp. 5820–5829

Publisher

American Chemical Society (ACS)

Publication Date

June 3, 2015

DOI

10.1021/acs.iecr.5b00765

ISSN

0888-5885

Contact the Experts team