Elastomeric fibre
What are Elastomeric Polyurethane Fibres ?
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According to ASTM definition: ‘An
elastomeric material is one which at room temperature can be stretched
repeatedly to at least twice its original length and upon immediate
release of stretch, will return with force to its approximate original
length.’
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The
elastomeric fibres are required for making clothings conform to, extend
with and physically support the human body. To meet the requirement of
textile industry these are required as threads of 50-100 micron
diameter, extensibility of at least 400%, easy stretch for comfort,
rapid, forceful and complete recovery, high enough tensile strength for
machinability, good whiteness index and dyeability.
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These properties can be achieved if the material is capable of existing in two states:
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The coiled state must be
above its glass transition point at room temperature. The polymer should
have high internal mobility to give low modulus and rapid retraction.
For rapid retraction, there must be some degree of long range
intermolecular interactions.
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Vulcanized natural rubber meets these requirements. However, it has low
strength, high recovery force, poor oxidative stability and dyeability.
Hence there was a need to develop synthetic polymers fulfilling the
above requirements.
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Segmented
polyurethanes have been reported to be suitable in this category and
some are suitable for textile applications. Before we understand the
segmented or elastomeric polyurethanes, let us see what are
polyurethanes ?
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The term polyurethane is used to describe polymeric materials with predominant urethane linkage
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The fibres that meet the molecular requirements for rubberlike threads
and are based on polyurethanes are categorized as elastomeric
polyurethane fibres. Interestingly, the first polyurethane fibre spun in
Germany was not an elastic yarn but was an ordinary “hard” yarn, rather
like nylon. It was made by reacting 1,4 butanediol with hexamethylene
diisocyanate, the two adding together to give the polyurethane. This
polymer was entirely a polyurethane unlike the current elastomeric
fibre.
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nButane diol + hexamethylene di-isocyanate = polyurethane
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Elastomeric polyurethanes are segmented polyurethanes and the word
"polyurethane" describes polymers with significant number of urethane
groups, together with a variety of other structurally important
functional groups, such as ester, ether and urea groups.
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The
segmented polyurethane is a block copolymer of a soft and hard segment.
The soft segments are very much longer and flexible than the hard
segments, exhibit very low intermolecular forces, and provide the low
modulus and high extensibility to fibre.
On the other hand, the hard segments exhibit very high intermolecular
forces which derive from rigidity, high degree of hydrogen bonding and
crystallinity.
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Polymerization Chemistry
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In the
polymerization process, a high molecular weight diol (polyol) is reacted
with two moles of diisocyanate to form a prepolymer having isocyanate
groups on both ends. The function of the diisocyanate is to convert the
two hydroxyl end groups in polyol to diisocyanate ends. But inevitably
some diisocyanates link glycols and therefore dimers, trimers etc. are
formed. This chain growth can be increased by dropping the diisocyanate
ratio below 2. The capped polyol or macrodiisocyanate is oligomeric with
a characteristic molecular weight distribution. It contains unreacted
diisocyanate, because for every diisocyanate that links two glycols,
another is left unreacted.
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The high
molecular weight diol or polyol can be either ether based or ester based
depending upon the type of linking groups. Polyoxytetramethylene glycol
(PTMG) is an example of ether based polyol, while polyadipate and
polycaprolactone are ester based polyols. Diphenyl methane
4,4’-diisocyanate(MDI) or toluene-2,4-diisocyanate(TDI) is used as
capping agent.
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Chain Extension |
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This
prepolymer is then reacted with a chain extender i.e. a diamine or a
diol to form a high molecular weight polyurethane. On reaction with
isocyanate group, the diamine chain extender molecule will form polyurea
rigid segments and diol chain extender molecule will form polyurethane
rigid segments. This fundamental difference between the diol and diamine
extended materials leads to differences in physical properties between
the two classes.
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Most
commonly used diamine chain extenders are hydrazine and ethylene
diamine. The schemes below show the chain extension by formation of urea
and urethane linkages.
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As
mentioned above, there is a large amount of free diisocyanate in the
prepolymer. This free diisocyanate reacts with chain extenders and forms
the hard segment of polyurethane. The hard segments blocks grow between
the preformed soft segments. The soft-segment domains are random-coiled
aliphatic polyethers or co-polyesters. Because of this, the final
polymer has a segmented structure comprising of both soft and hard
segments. The structure of the final segmented polyurethane can be best
explained by the following model.
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One example of elastomeric fibre is Spandex
fibre. Lycra or spandex was developed in 1959 by Dupont. It is a
copolymer of high molecular weight poly tetra methylene glycol or
caprolactone or polyethylene adipate as soft segment and
diphenylmethane-4,4’-diisocyanate or toluene-2,4-diisocyanate as hard
segment.
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Chemical Structure of diisocyanates: | |||||
Chemical structure of some polyols:
In general the soft segment has a very low melting point,if any,and is
based on a polyether or polyester of a molecular weight of the order
1000-3000.
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(-OCH2CH2CH2CH2CH2-CO)
Polycaprolactone
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Chemical structure of some chain extension agents:
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H2NCH2CH2NH2
Ethylenediamine
H2NNH2
Hydrazine
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Fibre Formation :
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The
elastomeric fibres can be spun both by solution (both dry and wet) as
well as melt spinning technique. The nature and amount of comonomers can
be selected depending upon the spinning technique to be employed. The
dry spinning is commercially the most popularly exploited method for
spinning of Spandex. The wet spinning can be carried out either by
spinning of final polyurethane solution or by spinning of prepolymer.
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In the
normal wet spinning, the solution is extruded into a coagulation bath
through a spinneret and after coagulation, combination and fusion
between the filaments take place, the fibre is wound up. The spinning of
prepolymer is known as reaction spinning.
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Dry spinning
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The majority of elastomeric fibres made by
solution spinning are dry-spun products having a polether –urethane
structure. The dry spinning dope, containing at least 25% polymer, is
metered through a filter pack and spinnerets at the top of a vertical
spinning tube at required temperature. In the presence of heated inert
gas flowing through the cell, nearly complete removal of solvent occurs
as the filaments descend through the cell and becomes thinner. Unlike
most synthetic fibres, these fibres are not subjected to an extensional
drawing stage but are used in as-spun form. After emerging from the
tube, the fibre is twisted. The twist travels upstream along the fibre
to a point in the upper part of the tube where the filaments comprising
the fibre fuse together and form an aggregate of filaments. This fusion
is indispensible for subsequent processing of the fibre to prevent
damage. The twist imparted is removed by the time the fibre reaches the
first roller by means of the tension of the fibre itself. Then the
finish oil that includes anti-tack agents is applied by contact with the
finishing roller to prevent yarn adhesion on the package and is wound
up by way of second roller. As shown in the Figure 4,
the heated gas is supplied perpendicular to the fibre as in melt
spinning. This prevents gas turbulence and heat transfer fluctuations.
Therefore accelerates the solvent evaporation and decreases the
entanglement of fibres and denier fluctuations.
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For
increasing the spinning speeds, the main controlling parameter is the
solvent evaporation rate. Therefore, for increasing the spinning speed
would require:
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Reaction Spinning:
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In reaction
spinning, the macro diisocyanate or the prepolymer is extruded in a
bath containing chain extender. The chemical reaction (chain extension)
and the final filament formation occur simultaneously hence the name
“reaction spinning”.
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The final filament formation and chemical
reaction in the filament occur almost simultaneously. This is the second
most important spinning process employed for spandex after dry
spinning. The technique exploits the high reactivity of diamines with
diisocyanates. Prepolymer formed from either polyether or polyester
macroglycol and diisocyanate, mixed with pigments and stabilizers is
metered through spinnerets in the coagulation bath containing diamine.
As the diamine diffuses to the surface of extrudate, chain extension
reaction occurs rapidly to form a gradually thickening skin of block
copolymer containing urea hard segments. The fibres made in this way are
incompletely reacted on leaving the diamine bath and therefore bond
with one another within the multi-filament yarn structure. The product
is therefore fused multi-filament yarn, in contrast to the solution spun
products.
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The
filaments are guided out of the bath before the reaction is complete
(they still contain a core of fluid prepolymer).It is supported on a
belt and cured in an oven to remove the volatiles and complete
crosslinking reaction. Reaction spun spandex filaments are collected in
bundles at the bath exit as in wet spinning. This process offers
economic advantages in polymerization and solvent recovery. However, it
has a product limitation mainly because of the bath drag on the
filaments while they are soft and not fully converted. Therefore, the
spinning of lighter fibres by this technique is difficult. Another
limitation of this process is difficulty in controlling the final
structure and molecular weight distribution.
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Melt Spinning
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Melt
spinning of Spandex polymers is carried out on a small scale. In order
to avoid degradation during melt spinning process, the polymer with
polyurethane linkages rather than polyurea hard segments are preferred.
The milder intermolecular attractive forces in polyurethane segments
result in reducing the final spinning temperature. However, melt spun
fibres can be produced from both polyether and polyester macroglycols
reacted with diisocyanate and chain extender ethylene glycol or 1,4
butane diol.
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For
melt-spinnable polymers, chain extension is carried out as described
above, with two exceptions. The solvent is omitted, of course, and the
chain extender is a low molecular weight diol with primary hydroxyl
groups (e.g, ethylene glycol). A basic or metalloorganic catalyst of the
type described earlier is useful for accelerating the reaction. Since
diols are principal ingredients of both the hard and soft segments,
melt-spinnable polyurethanes may be produced alternatively in a
single-step reaction of diisocyanate with a mixture of macroglycol and
chain extender. Because of the statistical nature of the reaction,
however, one-step synthesis gives a more polydisperse block copolymer
with less well defined hard and soft-segment domains and poorer fibre
properties.
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The elastomeric fibres have elongation at break of over 400% with good tenacity and completely elastic recovery, as shown in Figure 5.
This is in contrast to other type of stretch yarns made by ‘texturing’
or crimping a thermoplastic fibre,such as polyester or nylon.
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Figure 5. Elastane stress/strain curve for elastomeric fibres
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Structure-Property Correlation
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The
flexible soft segments comprise the predominant and continuous phase of
the fibre, usually 65-90% by weight. In the relaxed fibre, they are
essentially unoriented but uncoil and straighten to form crystalline
regions during alignment. This results in stiffening and strengthening
of the extended fibre. On release the soft-segment crystallites melt and
the chains recoil with a force derived largely from entropy change. The
length and nature of the soft segments determines the maximum
extensibility of fibres.
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Aromatic
diisocyanates condense rapidly with the other glycols and diamines
without any elimination product. Therefore is a preferred choice in
hard-segment formation. The hard segments are commonly
aromatic-aliphatic polyureas. The hydrogen bonded interactions between
urethane groups and urea groups contribute to hard segment domain
formation. The hard segment blocks are connected to soft segments by
urethane linkages.
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During
fibre formation, the hard segments from several chains get associated
into strongly bonded clusters or "tie-point" domains. They comprise less
than 25% of the mass and form islands of a discontinuous phase and
convert the polymer to a three dimensional network. The main forces of
attraction are hydrogen bonds between NH groups and carbonyls. As
mentioned above soft segments form a major fraction and this results in a
easy (that is low modulus) and high degree of stretch.
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Hard
segments affect physical properties such as modulus, hardness, tensile
strength and performance at high temperature. Higher conc. of polar
groups in hard segments, cause an increase in cohesive forces and hence
superior physical properties. On the other hand, soft segments determine
or control the elongation or stretch in these fibres. Polyether based
soft segments exhibit higher extension and lower physical properties
than polyester based soft segments (due to weaker chain interactions).
Polyethylene adipate gives high tensile strength as it crystallizes on
extension. Increase in molecular weight of soft segment causes a
decrease in modulus and increase in elongation at break. Generally soft
segment -60-90% by weight and hard segment <25 div="">25>
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Figure 6. Schematic representing hard and soft segments of elastomer
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The hard and soft segments are spatially separated and form discrete domains. Polyester based elastomers show a lower level of crystalline order compared to polyether based polyurethanes. The lower crystalline order in polyester based elastomers may be attributed to the more irregular chemical structure. On extension, soft segment polymer chains undergo stretching and disentanglement, causing rigid domains to lie in a disoriented manner. In the case of polyether based elastomers, extension ~150% results in marked elongational crystallization of soft segments. | |||||
As the
elastomer is further elongated upto 500% extension, the orientation of
soft segments improves only to a small extent, while the hard segments
get oriented in the direction of elongation as the maximum loading of
chains in the soft segments oppose any further extension. Therefore,
further extension causes a sliding process between hard segments.
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At ~ 500 %
extension, this process is complete and treatment of extended sample
with warm water (80 °C) results in uniform distribution of forces
amongst soft segment chains. This causes a loss of elongational
crystallization. On relaxation the soft segments disorient completely,
while the hard segments tend to remain in oriented form.
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The various mechanisms of hydrogen bond disruption or physical relaxation in hard segments are shown schematically Figure 7.
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Figure 7. Mechanism of hard bond disruption & relaxation
in hard segments
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