Extrusion Simulation and Experimental Validation To Optimize Precision Die Design
Extrusion Simulation and Experimental Validation To Optimize Precision Die Design
Extrusion Simulation and Experimental Validation To Optimize Precision Die Design
Northern Illinois University (NIU); &) Illinois State University, $) Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, % ) NICADDNorthern Illinois Center for Accelerator and Detector Development, NIU. complex extrusion processes, the optimal extrusion die design is the first step, to be complemented by an optimal design of vacuum-calibrator sizing-and-cooling tools, a s well as investigation and optimization of the extrusion process control for an ultimate quality and precision of the final product. Initial experiments at FNAL with two existing dies are used to validate CFD simulations and to provide critical data, not accounted for by the simulation, for more accurate die design. It has been realized that limitations and benefits of simulation and experimentation cannot replace each-other, but they may complement eachother synergistically. Furthermore, it has been realized that full comprehension of all extrusion processes and polymer melt properties is very important for effective die and calibrator design, and critical for extrusion process set-up and control, to achieve ultimate goal, high quality and precision of final extrudate profiles for plastic scintillators.
Abstract
A CFD-simulation is performed for an existing die and compared with the actual polymer flow and dimensions of the extrudate. Experimental validation of the simulation is used to improve new die design by integrating flow simulation through the 3 die geometry and the free-D surface flow with swelling after the die. Modified die-landand-lip profile is optimized using the so-called inverse extrusion simulation with an objective to improve accuracy of extrudate dimensions.
Introduction
A twin-screw extrusion line has been commissioned recently at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL) in collaboration with Northern Illinois Center for Accelerator and Detector Development (NICADD), to perform R&D, prototyping, and economical production of extruded plastic scintillators for large-scale accelerator detectors. For example, MINOS (Main Injector Neutrino Oscillation Search), a long-baseline neutrino-oscillation experiment, requires several hundred tons of finished plastic scintillators [1]. At about $40 per kilogram cost of cast plastic scintillator, a large-scale detector will not be affordable. However, using extruded plastic scintillators the cost is estimated at about $10/kg, and with further developments, it is expected to go down to $5/kg. The extrusion line consists of a Berstorff 40-mm diameter, 1.36 m long, twin-screw extruder (ZE 40A UTS; 200 HP), two K-Tron automated feeders (for polymer pellets and fluorescent dopants) and Conair downstream equipment (40 cm square, 5.2 m long vacuum and 6.4 m long spray cooling-tanks, belt-puller and saw). A Novatec compressed-nitrogen drier is utilized to purge and dry the polymer pellets before extrusion, in order to improve optical properties of the extrudate. In a collaborative project with NICADD/FNAL the Department of Mechanical Engineering at Northern Illinois University is developing more effective die design utilizing CFD simulation of extrusion flow and heat transfer processes. The objective is to achieve ultimate precision and quality of different, hollow-extrudate final profiles. Due to inherited sensitivity of final-product quality and precision on multiple controlling parameters of rather _______________________________________________
1)
= + (0 ) 1 + (& )a
n 1 a
(1)
Corresponding author
The polystyrene melt is known as moderately viscoelastic material, however its viscoelastic properties were not available and neglected in our simulation at this time. In addition, viscosity is not only function of temperature and shear rate as measured under isometric flow conditions in a laboratory [2], but also depends on previous shearing and thermo -mechanical degradation in general, which in turn depends on velocity gradients, pressure, and temperature in extrusion barrel and other components, including die. Also, scintillator optical properties are influenced by thermo -mechanical polymer degradation, as well as residual stresses due to finite
cooling and solidification rates including pulling drawdown during extrusion. These drawbacks could be minimized by better design and control of extrusion components and processes.
melt exiting the curved, rectangular-like die land crosssection is expected to reshape into desired rectangular profile downstream. The art of die design is to predict properly irregular die shape (with minimum number of trials) which will allow melt flow to reshape and solidify into desired (regular) extrudate profile. Powerful computational simulations, when properly utilized, will improve and speedup die design, resulting in over-all cost reduction. The objective of this CFD simulation is to determine the optimum die shape including the die land and pin profiles to obtain the des ired dimensions of the extrudate profile. A commercial, CFD finite-element code Polyflow [4] is used to simulate the three-dimensional (3-D) die flow and heat transfer as well as the free surface flow 25 mm downstream from the die exit, see the corresponding computational simulation domain in Fig. 2. The computational domain resembles the real 3-D die geometry and a free surface flow after the die, where velocity redistribution (equalization) and stress relaxation take place in a short distance downstream from the die exit. Even though the extrudate profile and the die-lip are quadri-symmetrical, due to complex spider-and-transition die structure, it was necessary to simulate half of the real flow domain. The domain is further divided into several sub-domains to facilitate application of related boundary conditions, see Fig. 2, i.e.: Inlet (1): fully developed inlet velocity corresponding to actual mass flow rate of 50 kg/hr and uniform inlet temperature (473 K or 200 C); walls (2): no slip at the die walls (Vn =Vs = 0; normal and streamline velocities, respectively), and uniform die wall temperature 473 K; symmetry planes (3): shear stress Fs = 0, Vn = 0, normal heat flux q n =0; free surface (4): zero pressure and traction/shear at boundary (Fn = 0, Fs = 0, and Vn =0), and convection heat transfer from the free surface to surrounding room-temperature air; outlet (5): normal stress Fn =0 or specified; all domains: viscous dissipation was neglected for our flow conditions (after verification) Due to the comp lex 3-D geometry of the die and the nonlinear relationship between polymer viscosity and shear rate, an elaborate finite element mesh was developed to facilitate numerical stability of the solution, see Fig. 3. It consists of 30,872 elements with structured hexahedral mesh in the die land and free surface, and unstructured tetrahedral mesh in the remaining portion. Simulations are run on a Windows 2.52-GHz-processor PC with 1 -GB RAM. On this platform, 19 hours and 36 minutes of CPU time was required to obtain full, non-isothermal inverse simulation results (new die-land profile). However parametric analysis may be and was performed much more efficiently by simulating flow in the die -land and/or preland regions only, neglecting inertia term, and with a
profile-form-shape was in qualitative agreement with actual extrusion sample profile. New, improved die-land profile was designed using so-called inverse extrusion simulation. It is evident that further improvements are possible by including polymer melt viscoelastic properties when available, and improvement of vacuum-calibrator design is critical, since precise hollow-profile dimensions are finalized during cooling and solidification in the vacuum-calibrator and further cooling downstream. Observed inconsistencies in the final extrudate profile indicate the importance of better process optimization and control. Considering the experience and initial progress in using powerful simulation software and well-equipped and instrumented extrusion line in FNAL, as well as specific issues identified for further investigation and improvements, it is expected to achieve consistent quality and dimensions of the extrudate profile within 1% in the future. Regardless of rather simple final profile, this is still going to be a challenge, due to inherited d ifficulties in balancing localized cooling of rather thick extrudate profile with internal hole and corners related asymmetry.
References
[1] Pla-Dalmau, A, A.D. Bross, and V. Rykalin, Extruding Plastic Scintillator at Fermilab, IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium, Portland, OR, 2003. [2] Styron viscosity data, Test Report # 7903 and 7914, DatapointLabs, Ithaca, NY, 2003. [3] Osswald, T.A. and P.J. Gramann, Polymer Processing Simulation Trends, Society for the Advancement of Material and Process Engineers, Erlangen, Germany, 2001. [4] Polyflow application software, Fluent Inc., Lebanon, NH. [5] Lee, W.S. and S.H.Y. Ho, Extrudate prediction and die design of profile extrusion, ANTEC 1999.
Acknowledgements
We would like to acknowledge financial support by NIUs Northern Illinois Center for Accelerator and Detector Development (NICADD) and Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Fermilab) for the Scintillator Extrusion Project and research partially described in this paper, and in particular to Dr. Gerald Blazey of NICADD and Dr. John Cooper of Fermilab.
Conclusion
Simulation results, including 3-D existing die geometry, measured polymer melt viscosity and actual extrusion boundary conditions, were calculated and compared with extrudate profile obtained during actual extrusion. Discrepancies between computational simulation and extrudate dimensions under the wellcontrolled extrusion process were within 5% and on occasion 10%. It was hard to maintain consistency of final extrudate product, due to some issues in achieving consistent stock feeding and optimum vacuum-calibrator sizing and cooling. However, the existing die simulation
Key Words
CFD simulation, inverse extrusion, hollow-profile extrusion, die design
TABLE 1: Doped Styron 663 thermo mechanical and viscosity properties Property Value 1040 1200 0.1231
Carreau-Yasuda coefficients, Eq.(1), at 473K
106
[Kg/m3 ]
Specific heat Cp [J/Kg-K] Thermal conductivity K [W/m-K] Thermal volumetric coefficient [m/m-K]
Density
0
[Pa-s]
13,400 0 0.351
[Pa-s] n
104
6.60e -5 a
103
0.527 0.845
102
10 -2 10 -1
Shear Rate (1/s)
100
101
102
103
2
1. Inlet 2. Die Walls 3. Symmetry 4. Free Surface 5. Outlet
Die land
Fig. 2 : Exploded view of extrusion die and computational and boundary domains
Fig. 3 : Finite element 3-D domain and half of extrudate profile mesh
7 6
Y (mm)
5 4 3 2 1 0 0 10 X (mm) Fig 4: Existing die, corresponding simulation and new improved-die profiles
Desired Extrudate Existing-Die Extrudate (Simulated) Vtake-up = 6.02 cm/s, PVacuum = 2.5 H2 O, and PN2 = 7.9 H2 O Fig. 5 : Typical extrudate sample profile
Pressure [Pa]
Free-surface flow
Die lip
Fig. 6 : Contours of velocity field at different cross-sections and pressure distribution simulation results