Polymer Engineering and Science, Vol.40, No.7, 1571-1580, 2000
Elongational behavior of polyethylene melts - Effect of deformation
Transient elongational viscosity of linear low density polyethylene (LLDPE) and two low density polyethylenes (LDPE1 and LDPE2) was measured at one temperature and different deformation rates in constant strain rate elongational rheometer. The elongational viscosity measurements revealed stronger strain hardening characteristics for LDPEs than that observed for LLDPE. The different response to stretching of these polymers is thought to relate to the presence of long chain branches in LDPEs, which affect the elongation viscosity profoundly. The onset of strain hardening for all long chain branched LDPEs as well as for linear LLDPE occurs at the same value of the critical strain, which is independent of temperature or deformation rate. An attempt has been made to explain this phenomenon in terms of the changes that occur in the macromolecular network upon stretching.