Premium
Mixing in an intermeshing twin screw extruder chamber: Combined cross and down channel flow
Author(s) -
Maheshri Jagdish C.,
Wyman Charles E.
Publication year - 1980
Publication title -
polymer engineering and science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.503
H-Index - 111
eISSN - 1548-2634
pISSN - 0032-3888
DOI - 10.1002/pen.760200904
Subject(s) - mechanics , plastics extrusion , channel (broadcasting) , residence time distribution , materials science , residence time (fluid dynamics) , mixing (physics) , flow (mathematics) , cross section (physics) , particle (ecology) , shear (geology) , fluid dynamics , open channel flow , composite material , electrical engineering , geotechnical engineering , physics , geology , engineering , oceanography , quantum mechanics
The cross and down channel flows are analyzed in the center of an idealized leakproof intermeshing twin screw extruder chamber. The respective velocity components are assumed to vary only with channel depth. Because the screw flights block the cross channel flow, fluid circulates between two complementary channel depths in the cross channel direction just as predicted for single screw extruders. In addition, fluid circulates between an independent set of channel depths in the down channel direction due to the seal provided by the second screw lands. When the two fluid motions are considered simultaneously, a fluid particle is predicted to follow a complex path over a number of channel depths during its residence time in the extruder. This unique flow also causes particles which are initially near one another to eventually move to significantly distant locations. Furthermore, a wide range of velocities and shear rates is experienced by a fluid particle as it moves to the various channel depths. The strain predicted by two approaches is nearly uniform for the twin screw extruder product in striking contrast to the distribution of absolute strains found in single screw devices. The strain uniformity, wide shear history, and fluid separation predicted by this analysis of a limiting case may help explain the good mixing capabilities of these devices.