Excom said:
Thanks for the reply.
I get that mixing is possible when heated above the melting temperature but is it also possible when heated above the glass transition temperature but below the melting point?
In real life the polymer will have some degree of crystallinity. In this case, is it necessary to go above the melting temperature before mixing/merging of the polymer particles becomes possible?
I don't know that, specifically, but plastics are generally difficult to transfer heat to, and it takes a good deal of mechanical energy to mix them, which also adds heat. I don't believe the temperature in an extruder is remotely uniform on a micro-scale, so it seems possible there is at least some portion of the material that is in the area above glass transition, but below melting, but it may be academic. As difficult as it is to mix polymers, it is harder to measure an accurate temperature profile on material being mixed, so I'm not sure how you would be sure.
Mostly, I believe factories will blend and extrude with the following in mind:
-Makes desired quality--No thermal decomposition, or insufficient mixing
-Fastest/easiest processing
-Most energy efficient
If the conditions required to meet the above, happen to create a situation that is near the margin between TG and melting point, that's just what it is.
My plastics experience is with PVC compounds and nylon, and I'd hesitate to speak on all polymers with that limited experience. I'd expect, however, that money, energy, and quality will still be just as important.