Extrusion - Single-screw extrusion (part 1)

Add to my library

AM3650 V1 Article

Extrusion - Single-screw extrusion (part 1)

Authors : Bruno VERGNES, Stéphan PUISSANT

Publication date: October 10, 2002, Review date: January 10, 2019 | Lire en français

Add to my library Add to my library

Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur You do not have access to this resource.
Request your free trial access! Free trial

Already subscribed?

Overview

Read this article from a comprehensive knowledge base, updated and supplemented with articles reviewed by scientific committees.

Read the article

AUTHORS

  • Bruno VERGNES : ENSTA engineer - Doctor of Science (University of Nice) - Senior Researcher, École des Mines de Paris

  • Stéphan PUISSANT : ENSAM engineer - Doctorate in Materials Science and Engineering (École des mines de Paris) - Head of the Packaging Competence Center at Alcatel Optronics

 INTRODUCTION

Extrusion is by far the most important polymer shaping process. The basic principle of single-screw extrusion is the use of a screw that rotates inside a cylindrical barrel. A continuous process, extrusion is used to manufacture finished products or semi-finished products of constant cross-section (films, sheets, tubes, profiles, etc.) by passing them through a tool called a die. In this case, the main functions of the process are to melt the solid polymer, then pressurize and mix the molten polymer, in order to feed the die under the right conditions, which will give the manufactured product its shape. In addition to shaping, extrusion is also used for granulation, compounding and polymerization. Extrusion leads the way ahead of injection molding and other transformation processes, with some 1.7 million tonnes of material consumed per year (France, 1999 figures).

The very principle of extrusion is a very old one, if we trace it back to Archimedes' screw, and has been widely used for a very long time, particularly in the food industry (sausage and pasta production). In the case of synthetic materials, the process was first applied to rubber in the early twentieth century, and has since been widely developed in the field of thermoplastics.

You do not have access to this resource.
Logo Techniques de l'Ingenieur

Exclusive to subscribers. 97% yet to be discovered!

You do not have access to this resource. Click here to request your free trial access!

Already subscribed?


Ongoing reading
Extrusion - Single-screw extrusion (part 1)

Article included in this offer

"Plastics and composites"

( 347 articles )

Complete knowledge base

Updated and enriched with articles validated by our scientific committees

Services

A set of exclusive tools to complement the resources

View offer details

Dans les ressources documentaires

Procédés d’extrusion réactive

L'extrusion réactive montre de grandes potentialités et commence à faire ses preuves dans l'industrie. Ce...

Coextrusion des polymères : instabilités d’interface

Dans cet article sont mises en avant les instabilités d'interface dans le procédé de coextrusion des poly...

Modélisation des écoulements de coextrusion

La coextrusion consiste à faire s’écouler au sein d’un même outillage d’extrusion des polymères de nature...

Tous les livres blancs
Toutes les actualités
Contact us