Gels are an unsightly but common problem in single-screw extrusion. They can
be large or small, hollow or solid, clear or discolored. They appear in sudden
showers, discrete stripes, or randomly dispersed. By identifying
the specific type of gel and circumstances of its appearance, you stand a much
better chance of tracking down and fixing the cause—whether it stems from
problems in raw material, processing, or equipment.
Know your gel types
Platelets, fisheyes, or disc-shaped gels are round and thickest at the center.
Cut them open, and you wont find any discoloration. These types of gels
come from two sources: crosslinking and unmelts. Both crosslinked and unmelted
gels can get through screen packs and disrupt polymer flow farther downstream.
Crosslinked gels are formed by overheating the resin. They melt at a higher
temperature than the surrounding resin. Crosslinked gels can come from raw-material
contamination or use of too much reclaim. Unmelted gels have the same melting
point as the surrounding resin, but remained colder than the average melt temperature.
Causes include heating too quickly in the feed zone, melting too slowly in the
transition zone, insufficient mixing, and excessive heat loss in the adapters
or die. The preferred solution is to increase mixing time (recirculation flow
in the metering section of the screw) by adding screens to raise backpressure.
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Large, hollow gels, or lensing, are caused by moisture trapped in the melt. The answer is to pay more attention to resin storage and drying.
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Another strategy for eliminating unmelts is to use what is commonly referred
to as a humped temperature profile. First, lower the feed-zone temperature,
which will result in more intensive friction in the transition zone. Screw motor
amperage will usually increase. Average melt temperature may increase noticeably,
so watch out for crosslinked, discolored, or burnt gels if friction is too severe.
You may also have to lower the last barrel zone to cool the melt.
Pinpoint gels, referred to as applesauce, look like dust particles
entrapped in resin. Causes include material contamination or too much reclaim.
Another possible cause is incomplete melting. The preferred remedy is to heat
the material more quickly by increasing frictional shear. A second option is
to increase heating time by reducing screw speed, but this also reduces output.
Other possible culprits are insufficient backpressure or contamination from
a dirty screw. If you need to raise backpressure, the preferred solution is
to add more screens and increase screw speed. Expect the melt temperature to
rise somewhat.
Hollow gels, referred to as lensing, occur when vapor is trapped
in the melt and carried forward to the die. Causes include wet resin or gases
produced as the resin heats up. Pellets can get wet from condensation when resin
is sucked from a cold silo into the hopper during winter. A solution is to allow
resin to warm up inside the factory before using it. For hygroscopic materials
like nylon and PET, make sure the resin is properly dried.
Other causes are insufficient heating in the feed section or turning the screw
too fast. Air is normally forced backwards into the feed throat as the solid
granules are compressed prior to melting. If only the surface of the granules
melts before the pellets are compressed, air can get trapped.
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A Rogues Gallery of Gels
These photos show lensing (top), arrowhead or chevron-shaped gels (middle), and applesauce (bottom). To prevent them, you need to know what caused them in the first place.
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The solution is raising the temperature in the first and second extruder zones
so that the granules soften, compress, and squeeze the air out before melting
begins. Another solution is to reduce your screw speed, but this also reduces
output. Other causes to look for are insufficient drying or funnel flow inside
the drying hopper—when material at the center flows quickly while material
near the wall stagnates.
Gels can also appear as arrowheads, chevrons, and V or J shapes. Causes again
include resin contamination or use of too much reclaim. If processing
conditions are at fault, the problem is likely to be too low a temperature of
the melt or die or too little backpressure, all of which result in insufficient
mixing. The preferred solutions are increasing frictional shear by lowering
extruder feed and transition zone temperatures. Raising adapter and die temperatures
may solve the problem if heat is being lost too rapidly after the extruder.
Discolored gels are caused by overheating or burning. Material causes include
contamination, too much reclaim, or insufficient antioxidant. Faulty processing
conditions to look for are excessive frictional shear inside the extruder, too
hot a die, or too much recirculation flow in the metering section.
Possible equipment problems are a clogged screen pack or dirty screw or die.
Or, you could be using the wrong screw and/or barrel, a screw thats too
short, adapters and flow channels that are too wide, inappropriate die design,
or incorrect heater or thermocouple locations. One solution is to maintain sufficient
shear to wipe the metal surfaces constantly, since most polymer degradation
occurs when polymer contacts metal for too long.
Its also possible that you are overheating the resin locally in certain
parts of the extruder screw. Variable-depth melt thermocouples in the adapter
can often detect this problem even when barrel temperature controllers do not
detect overheating.
Patterns of occurrence
If gels are randomly dispersed, they usually come from the raw material or the
extruder. Raw-material problems that produce gels include contamination, too
much recycled or reclaimed material, and insufficient antioxidant. Always check
for contamination first because its easy to detect and simple to fix.
If gels form in lanes in the machine direction, alternating with lanes free
of gels, the problem is usually downstream from the extruder in the die or die
block.
When large quantities of gels repeatedly appear and disappear, the phenomenon
is called gel showers. They may be caused by improper processing conditions
and are common when materials with very different melting rates are blended
together. Pigment masterbatches, for example, are designed to melt quickly to
maximize mixing time in the extruder. But if the feed zone is too hot, pigment
granules melt too quickly and become encrusted on the screw. Encrusted granules
then break off occasionally, resulting in a sudden cascade of gels the same
color as the pigment masterbatch. They arent burnt gels, just heavily
pigmented unmelts. Extruder motor amps will rise because the sudden increase
in pigment concentration adds more friction to the transition zone. The preferred
solution is to lower the temperature slightly in both the feed and transition
zones to delay melting of the masterbatch.