Polymers (May 2024)

Modelling the Melting Kinetics of Polyetheretherketone Depending on Thermal History: Application to Additive Manufacturing

  • Adel Benarbia,
  • Vincent Sobotka,
  • Nicolas Boyard,
  • Christophe Roua

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/polym16101319
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 10
p. 1319

Abstract

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Recent techniques for forming thermoplastics, such as welding, automated fibre placement or additive manufacturing, generate successive rapid heating and cooling cycles that cause the partial melting of crystals during the process. The melting of an interface is essential to guarantee a good molecular diffusion across the welded parts. Nevertheless, no model can correctly predict the melting kinetics and consequently the evolution of the crystalline degree during the layers’ deposition process. The purpose of this paper was to define the melting kinetics depending on the crystallization conditions for polyetheretherketone (PEEK). Firstly, a non-isothermal crystallization model was proposed over a wide range of cooling rates from 0.1 K.s−1 to 150 K.s−1. Experimental results have highlighted a dual-mode behaviour of melting and demonstrated the dependence of melting temperatures on crystallization conditions. Based on these observations, a model was developed to predict the melting behaviour after non-isothermal crystallization. The melting model revealed that after high cooling rates, primary and secondary crystals melt separately at low temperatures, while after slow cooling rates, both structures melt simultaneously at higher temperatures. Finally, the melting model was applied to the FFF thermal cycle to illustrate the influence of process parameters on the melting kinetics during deposition.

Keywords