{"title":"第一章:高性能聚乙烯纤维","authors":"Pieter Jan Lemstra","doi":"10.1016/j.aiepr.2022.03.001","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<div><p>In 1960, Treloar [<span>1</span>] published a seminal paper showing that the stiffness (E-Modulus) of an extended viz. fully stretched polyethylene and polyamide chain is close to 200 GPa, which is appr. the same stiffness as steel. In the 1970s, Zhurkov [<span>2</span>] and Boudreaux [<span>3</span>] estimated that the strength of an extended PE chain could be as high as 25 GPa. These theoretical calculations/predictions rose the interest of many scientists and engineers to pursue chain-extension which in practice implies that fibers are made in which a maximum degree of chain-extension, viz. chain alignment, in the fiber direction is attempted. These earlier publications were in fact not very realistic because even if polymer chains could be perfectly aligned in the fiber direction, then the maximum length of a polymer chain is limited to some 10 μm. In measuring fiber properties macroscopic dimensions are encountered with gauge length's in the order of several centimeters in the tensile tester. Consequently, in a tensile tester an ensemble of a larger number of parallel chains is tested and the stress-transfer and chain overlap between individual chains determine the tensile properties like strength and stiffness/E-Modulus. Consequently, the strength of a polyethylene fiber is determined by the rather weak intermolecular van der Waals interactions with important consequences for chain alignment and chain length.</p><p>In the case of the non-polar polyethylene with only weak van der Waals intermolecular interactions one would expect no impressive tensile fiber properties whereas in the case of more polar polymers, such as the polyamides, one would expect quite some interesting properties when the hydrogen-bonds between the individual chains could be aligned along the fiber axis. The reality turned out to be quite the opposite as will be discussed in this chapter for polyethylene and in the chapter on ‘high-performance fibers based on flexible polar molecules’ for the polyamides (nylons).</p></div>","PeriodicalId":7186,"journal":{"name":"Advanced Industrial and Engineering Polymer Research","volume":"5 2","pages":"Pages 49-59"},"PeriodicalIF":9.9000,"publicationDate":"2022-04-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2542504822000033/pdfft?md5=9917cbae46b59789697823b9ec538d3a&pid=1-s2.0-S2542504822000033-main.pdf","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Chapter 1: High-performance polyethylene fibers\",\"authors\":\"Pieter Jan Lemstra\",\"doi\":\"10.1016/j.aiepr.2022.03.001\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"<div><p>In 1960, Treloar [<span>1</span>] published a seminal paper showing that the stiffness (E-Modulus) of an extended viz. fully stretched polyethylene and polyamide chain is close to 200 GPa, which is appr. the same stiffness as steel. In the 1970s, Zhurkov [<span>2</span>] and Boudreaux [<span>3</span>] estimated that the strength of an extended PE chain could be as high as 25 GPa. These theoretical calculations/predictions rose the interest of many scientists and engineers to pursue chain-extension which in practice implies that fibers are made in which a maximum degree of chain-extension, viz. chain alignment, in the fiber direction is attempted. These earlier publications were in fact not very realistic because even if polymer chains could be perfectly aligned in the fiber direction, then the maximum length of a polymer chain is limited to some 10 μm. In measuring fiber properties macroscopic dimensions are encountered with gauge length's in the order of several centimeters in the tensile tester. Consequently, in a tensile tester an ensemble of a larger number of parallel chains is tested and the stress-transfer and chain overlap between individual chains determine the tensile properties like strength and stiffness/E-Modulus. Consequently, the strength of a polyethylene fiber is determined by the rather weak intermolecular van der Waals interactions with important consequences for chain alignment and chain length.</p><p>In the case of the non-polar polyethylene with only weak van der Waals intermolecular interactions one would expect no impressive tensile fiber properties whereas in the case of more polar polymers, such as the polyamides, one would expect quite some interesting properties when the hydrogen-bonds between the individual chains could be aligned along the fiber axis. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
1960年,Treloar[1]发表了一篇开创性的论文,表明延长即完全拉伸的聚乙烯和聚酰胺链的刚度(e -模量)接近200gpa,这是appr。和钢一样的刚度。在20世纪70年代,Zhurkov[2]和Boudreaux[3]估计延伸PE链的强度可高达25 GPa。这些理论计算/预测引起了许多科学家和工程师对追求链延伸的兴趣,实际上,这意味着纤维是在纤维方向上尝试最大程度的链延伸,即链对齐。这些早期的出版物实际上并不太现实,因为即使聚合物链可以在纤维方向上完美排列,那么聚合物链的最大长度也被限制在10 μm左右。在拉伸试验机中,测量纤维的宏观尺寸时遇到的是几厘米量级的规长。因此,在拉力测试仪中,测试大量平行链的集合,单个链之间的应力传递和链重叠决定了强度和刚度/ e -模量等拉伸性能。因此,聚乙烯纤维的强度是由相当弱的分子间范德华相互作用决定的,这对链的排列和链的长度有重要的影响。在只有弱范德华分子间相互作用的非极性聚乙烯的情况下,人们不会期望有令人印象深刻的拉伸纤维性能,而在极性更强的聚合物的情况下,比如聚酰胺,当单个链之间的氢键可以沿着纤维轴排列时,人们会期望有相当有趣的性能。事实证明,聚乙烯和聚酰胺(尼龙)的“基于柔性极性分子的高性能纤维”这一章将讨论的事实恰恰相反。
In 1960, Treloar [1] published a seminal paper showing that the stiffness (E-Modulus) of an extended viz. fully stretched polyethylene and polyamide chain is close to 200 GPa, which is appr. the same stiffness as steel. In the 1970s, Zhurkov [2] and Boudreaux [3] estimated that the strength of an extended PE chain could be as high as 25 GPa. These theoretical calculations/predictions rose the interest of many scientists and engineers to pursue chain-extension which in practice implies that fibers are made in which a maximum degree of chain-extension, viz. chain alignment, in the fiber direction is attempted. These earlier publications were in fact not very realistic because even if polymer chains could be perfectly aligned in the fiber direction, then the maximum length of a polymer chain is limited to some 10 μm. In measuring fiber properties macroscopic dimensions are encountered with gauge length's in the order of several centimeters in the tensile tester. Consequently, in a tensile tester an ensemble of a larger number of parallel chains is tested and the stress-transfer and chain overlap between individual chains determine the tensile properties like strength and stiffness/E-Modulus. Consequently, the strength of a polyethylene fiber is determined by the rather weak intermolecular van der Waals interactions with important consequences for chain alignment and chain length.
In the case of the non-polar polyethylene with only weak van der Waals intermolecular interactions one would expect no impressive tensile fiber properties whereas in the case of more polar polymers, such as the polyamides, one would expect quite some interesting properties when the hydrogen-bonds between the individual chains could be aligned along the fiber axis. The reality turned out to be quite the opposite as will be discussed in this chapter for polyethylene and in the chapter on ‘high-performance fibers based on flexible polar molecules’ for the polyamides (nylons).