00:00:00
in this last lecture on polymers I want
00:00:03
to give a really broad overview of
00:00:05
synthesis and processing techniques that
00:00:07
are that are used for polymers so let's
00:00:10
begin with synthesis synthesis and
00:00:12
there's basically two forms of synthesis
00:00:14
synthesis that I want you to be aware of
00:00:16
the first is addition polymerization and
00:00:19
we've talked a little bit about this
00:00:21
before
00:00:22
but all it is is the process of adding
00:00:24
monomers one at a time to form some
00:00:26
linear chain and it consists of three
00:00:29
phases the first phase is the initiation
00:00:32
phase and what you see is there's our
00:00:35
monomer and it's gonna join up with some
00:00:38
reactive group it's gonna break the
00:00:41
double bond and then form to the chain
00:00:43
and leave a reactive carbon region at
00:00:48
the end so so now this can go bond with
00:00:51
another monomer so that's the initiation
00:00:53
phase the propagation phase is where
00:00:56
what's formed then the initiation phase
00:00:59
actually goes out and does bond with
00:01:00
more monomers so it forms this chain and
00:01:03
so it's important to remember that
00:01:04
addition polymerization is gonna
00:01:06
typically form linear chains it's not
00:01:09
what's going to be used for network
00:01:11
polymers or heavily cross-linked
00:01:13
polymers like we talked before so we end
00:01:15
up with this chain formation and you can
00:01:17
imagine this goes on for many many
00:01:19
chains that process is relatively rapid
00:01:22
so it might take a hundredth or a
00:01:24
thousandth of a second to form let's say
00:01:26
a 1000 units during this phase and then
00:01:30
finally we have to terminate this
00:01:31
process so there's a termination phase
00:01:33
and and all that's happening here
00:01:36
there's one of the one of the chains
00:01:41
that have formed in the propagation
00:01:42
phase there's another and there's
00:01:44
basically two options they could form
00:01:46
that they could bond here and form this
00:01:49
terminated combination here or they
00:01:52
could do what's called
00:01:53
disproportionation and in this case one
00:01:57
of the hydrogens is going to bond in
00:01:58
this this region and then a double bond
00:02:00
is going to form with this carbon and
00:02:02
that's what you see here so those are
00:02:03
your two options to terminate the
00:02:05
addition polymerization or the chain
00:02:07
reaction polymerization reaction so
00:02:09
that's one type of polymerization a
00:02:11
second well
00:02:13
me back up the the relative rates of
00:02:16
initiation propagation termination
00:02:17
that's how we can control the molecular
00:02:20
weights of the polymer that we're going
00:02:21
to produce okay second type of
00:02:26
polymerization is the is called a
00:02:28
condensation polymerization reaction or
00:02:30
a step reaction and this is the
00:02:33
formation of polymers by stepwise and
00:02:35
molecular chemical reactions that sounds
00:02:38
confusing so it's easiest to talk about
00:02:39
a example so here's an example of the
00:02:42
formation of nylon 6-6 so we have the
00:02:45
monomers here the first one is a hexa
00:02:48
methyl diamine and the second is adipic
00:02:51
acid and what you see is those react to
00:02:54
form nylon 6-6 plus water so a couple
00:02:59
features are important in this type of
00:03:01
reaction the first is that unlike in the
00:03:04
addition polymerization reaction the
00:03:06
reactants that is the the participating
00:03:10
components do not have the same formula
00:03:13
as the repeat unit so write hexa methyl
00:03:15
diamine and adipic acid are neither one
00:03:18
of those are nylon 6-6 okay the other
00:03:21
thing and the reason that we call it a
00:03:22
condensation reaction is that it
00:03:25
typically condenses out a byproduct in
00:03:27
this case water so we form the reaction
00:03:30
between the hydrogen and the hydroxyl
00:03:32
and we create water because of the
00:03:35
reaction so there's our condensate the
00:03:38
feature to be I guess aware of and this
00:03:42
type of reaction is that it's going to
00:03:44
be typically a slower reaction than the
00:03:48
addition polymerization so it takes a
00:03:49
longer time this is the kind of reaction
00:03:53
that we would expect to see when we're
00:03:55
taught when we're forming epoxies and
00:03:57
other sort of network polymers okay so I
00:04:02
want to say about polymer synthesis now
00:04:04
let's move on and talk about the
00:04:06
processing of polymers and I'm I'm not
00:04:08
going to cover every possible processing
00:04:10
type just that the kind of the major
00:04:12
ones so the first I want to I want to
00:04:14
talk about is compression molding and
00:04:16
this type of processing technique can be
00:04:20
used for both thermoplastics and
00:04:21
thermosets and I'm showing you the
00:04:25
process here but I'll just give it to
00:04:26
you in words
00:04:27
first you're gonna place the polymer in
00:04:28
some mold cavity and so that there's
00:04:31
there there's your sort of pink polymer
00:04:33
in the mold cavity then you're going to
00:04:35
heat the mold and apply pressure that's
00:04:38
going to basically liquefy the the
00:04:42
polymer and allow it to form in the in
00:04:47
the same shape as the mold and then when
00:04:51
you're all when you're all done you're
00:04:54
going to have the the cooling of the
00:04:56
polymer part and then you have your
00:04:57
molded pieces it's fairly simple okay
00:05:01
now let's talk about injection molding
00:05:04
in this case there's plastic pellets
00:05:08
that are put into a hopper so here's
00:05:10
your hopper with the plastic pellets
00:05:12
then there's a ram a hydraulic ram that
00:05:15
forces the pellets into a heating
00:05:16
chamber and so it's now putting the this
00:05:20
heated these heated pellets which
00:05:23
actually become a liquid under pressure
00:05:25
and then this molten plastic is going to
00:05:28
be forced under pressure in G so it's
00:05:31
injected into the mold cavity and forms
00:05:33
the part so here's a little animation
00:05:35
kind of showing that process you can see
00:05:39
that the RAM creates the pressure
00:05:42
squeezes the polymer into the mold then
00:05:46
the mold cools the polymer cools becomes
00:05:49
a solid part and there you have it the
00:05:52
final a conventional form of polymer
00:05:55
processing I want you to be aware of is
00:05:57
extrusion and this is typically only
00:06:00
used for thermal plastics and it begins
00:06:04
in a similar way to the injection
00:06:06
molding we put plastic pellets in a
00:06:08
hopper and then they're dropped onto
00:06:10
what's called a turning screw and as the
00:06:12
screw turns it moves the the polymer
00:06:15
forward and there's a the there is a
00:06:20
heating elements along the way so the
00:06:22
plastic pellets are melting as the screw
00:06:24
pushes them along and then finally it
00:06:27
gets through the gets to the end and
00:06:30
it's forced through a die under the
00:06:32
pressure of whatever the screw is
00:06:33
driving and it creates this extrude
00:06:36
eight
00:06:37
that comes out of the the die so another
00:06:40
little animation to highlight that you
00:06:43
can see the green polymer being squished
00:06:45
through a die and forming the extrude 8
00:06:47
and I'll show you that one more time the
00:06:50
screw turns forces the polymer through a
00:06:54
die the die then is is creating the
00:06:57
shape of the polymer as it comes out so
00:06:59
that's the extrusion process the final
00:07:04
process I want to talk about is 3d
00:07:06
printing and it's probably a little bit
00:07:07
more modern than the other processes
00:07:12
there are a variety of ways that's where
00:07:14
you print I'm gonna basically break them
00:07:16
into two different types and I guess I
00:07:18
in my mind all the other types or some
00:07:21
form of subcategory or combination of
00:07:23
these types so the first is fused
00:07:25
deposition modeling or FDM and in this
00:07:28
case what happens is that you have some
00:07:33
polymer filament
00:07:34
here's your polymer filament it's fed
00:07:35
into a nozzle the nozzle is heated to
00:07:39
the somewhere above the glass transition
00:07:41
temperature and the the so the filament
00:07:46
is then extruded and it lays down a bead
00:07:50
so to speak of polymer and it can do
00:07:53
whatever shape the the it wants
00:07:56
depending on how the extruder and the
00:07:58
build platform move typically this is
00:08:01
only done with thermoplastics okay
00:08:04
another technique is what's called
00:08:06
stereo lithography and I'm grouping it
00:08:08
with digital light processing DLP
00:08:11
because they work under the same
00:08:12
principle so in this case we load a
00:08:16
polymer resin so unlike in this case
00:08:19
where we have a solid polymer filament
00:08:22
here we pour a liquid resin into a bath
00:08:25
and we pass UV light through the bottom
00:08:29
of the tank the build platform comes
00:08:32
into the tank and the polymer is cured
00:08:34
on the build platform and then as it
00:08:36
moves up we continue to cure successive
00:08:38
layers onto that part typically this is
00:08:41
going to be a
00:08:44
the resin that's used is going to be a
00:08:46
thermoset it's not going to be a
00:08:47
thermoplastic because it's not going to
00:08:49
be heat driven it's going to be a
00:08:50
reaction cure
00:08:51
that's initiated with with UV so let me
00:08:55
give you just some some animations of
00:08:57
what these look like so this is a Prusa
00:08:59
3d printer showing you the FDM approach
00:09:02
printing some some form of a creature
00:09:04
here and you can see that the build
00:09:07
plate moves and the ik and the extruder
00:09:09
moves above it and that's how you can
00:09:11
get the the full XYZ motion of the of
00:09:15
the filament okay
00:09:18
I also want to show you the SLA printing
00:09:22
in this case this is the formlabs
00:09:25
printer and this light you can see is
00:09:27
actually the laser the UV laser curing
00:09:29
every layer and this is obviously
00:09:31
time-lapse so we're drawing the part out
00:09:33
of the resin bath we have a whole suite
00:09:37
of these in and actually we have a suite
00:09:39
of these as well in our makerspace in
00:09:41
the engineering building and the only
00:09:43
difference between this SLA process and
00:09:47
the DLP process is that SLA is using a
00:09:49
UV laser and DLP is going to use
00:09:52
basically a UV screen
00:09:54
that like a TV projection screen
00:09:56
underneath to generate that the UV the
00:10:00
the regions where you want the UV to
00:10:02
cure so those are those are sort of the
00:10:04
two I would say primary methods for 3d
00:10:07
printing polymers and in kind of the
00:10:10
highlights of each so hopefully you
00:10:13
found that interesting again I know it's
00:10:15
just very cursory we're not going to go
00:10:16
into great detail in each of one of
00:10:18
those but I want you to be aware at
00:10:19
least as engineers how how we handle and
00:10:23
process polymers