Boron nitride processing aid boosts quality of mLLDPE film. (Additives Close-Up).Compounders and processors of mLLDPE blown film who are looking for Looking for In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with. improved processability and film quality at comparable or even lower total cost may want to take a look at a new family of boron nitride Boron nitride (BN) is a binary chemical compound, consisting of equal proportions of boron and nitrogen. The empirical formula is therefore BN. Boron nitride is isoelectronic to the elemental forms of carbon and isomorphism occurs between the two species. (BN) processing aids. Called CarboGlide, this family is said to be a step beyond standard fluoropolymer A fluoropolymer is a polymer that contains atoms of fluorine. It is characterized by a high resistance to solvents, acids, and bases. Fluoropolymers were discovered serendipitously in 1938 by Dr. Roy J. Plunkett. processing aids. Research on BN in polyolefins, previously focused on tubular extrusion and wire coating, now has been expanded to blown film. BN producer Saint-Gobain Advanced Ceramics Corp. (formerly Carborundum Corp.) in Amherst, N.Y., is the exclusive licensee of a technology for incorporating BN particles in polyolefins and fluoropolymers, for which DuPont received a process patent in 1997. Says Saint-Gobain product and market manager Stephen Lyle, "We have learned that BN is only a piece of the puzzle. BN is one of the components of CarboGlide, a proprietary family of process aids." Saint-Gobain hopes to gain FDA FDA abbr. Food and Drug Administration FDA, n.pr See Food and Drug Administration. FDA, n.pr the abbreviation for the Food and Drug Administration. food-contact approval for certain grades of CarboGlide this year. Numerous benefits In the past year, Saint-Gobain has experimented in blown film using Exceed mLLDPE grades from Exxon-Mobil Chemical. Results reportedly show that CarboGlide permits processing at significantly higher shear rates Shear rate is a measure of the rate of shear deformation: ![]() For the simple shear case, it is just a gradient of velocity in a flowing material. without melt fracture. By extending the processing window of mLLDPE, CarboGlide enables higher throughputs than can be obtained with fluoropolymers while maintaining comparable or lower cost. In one test, virgin mLLDPE film was run at 16 ft/mm at constant extruder pressure of 5000 psi. Throughput with 800 ppm (Pages Per Minute) The measurement of printer speed. See gppm. PPM - Portable Pixmap of fluoropolymer processing aid increased to 28 ft/min, while throughput with only 400 ppm of CarboGlide was 54 ft/min (see Fig. 1). Lyle says subsequent tests have shown similar throughput with only 250 ppm of CarboGlide. Additional benefits are said to be improved gauge control and clarity. The data show much more consistent film thickness, promising reduced resin consumption, says senior R&D engineer Eugene Pruss (Fig. 2). The mLLDPE film made with CarboGlide showed 65% light transmittance vs. 58% with fluoropolymer and 40% for virgin mLLDPE. Preliminary data also indicate that CarboGlide can be used to vary the coefficient of friction coefficient of friction n. pl. coefficients of friction The ratio of the force that maintains contact between an object and a surface and the frictional force that resists the motion of the object. (COF). CarboGlide CG2110, available as a 100%-active concentrate or as a 1-10% masterbatch, costs $40-$50/lb, about three to four times as much as fluoropolymer process aids: However, the overall cost of CarboGlide is about 1cents/lb of film. This is equal to or less than what mLLDPE film processors are currently paying for fluoropolymer process aids, according to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Lyle. NEED TO KNOW MORE? Saint-Gobain Advanced Ceramics, Structural Ceramic Group, Amherst, N.Y. (716) 691-2015, www.saint-gobain.com [Figure 1 omitted] [Figure 2 omitted] |
|
||||||||||||||||


Printer friendly
Cite/link
Email
Feedback
Reader Opinion