ASTM D3835 Capillary Rheometry Shear Sweep, Thermal Stability
Determination of Capillary Rheometry Shear Sweep and Thermal Stability is done by ASTM D3835, ISO 11443. The shear rate and temperature conditions are maintained to simulate material calendaring, molding, and extrusion conditions. Results are used to determine the process parameters for product preparation and thermal stability study.

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- Overview
- Scope, Applications, and Benefits
- Test Process
- Specifications
- Instrumentation
- Results and Deliverables
Overview
ASTM D3835 defines standardized procedures for determining the rheological properties of thermoplastic melts using a capillary rheometer. Melt rheology — particularly viscosity as a function of shear rate — is fundamental to predicting how a polymer will flow and process in operations such as extrusion, injection molding, blow molding, and fiber spinning. Capillary rheometry provides the most direct and accurate measurement of melt viscosity under conditions closely resembling actual processing.
The test forces molten polymer through a precision capillary die at controlled ram speeds and measures the resulting pressure drop. Apparent viscosity, true (Rabinowitsch-corrected) viscosity, and shear stress are calculated as functions of shear rate over a wide range. Additionally, ASTM D3835 covers the evaluation of thermal stability by monitoring viscosity change over time at a fixed temperature, providing data on the polymer’s processing window and susceptibility to thermal degradation.

Scope, Applications, and Benefits
Scope
ASTM D3835 evaluates:
- Melt viscosity as a function of shear rate (flow curve)
- Apparent and true viscosity with Rabinowitsch correction
- Bagley correction for end effects
- Thermal stability (viscosity vs. time at constant temperature)
- Effect of temperature on melt viscosity
- Shear sensitivity (power law index, n)
Applications
- Polymer processing characterization (extrusion, molding)
- Quality control in resin production
- Compounding and formulation development
- Processability comparison of polymer grades
- Thermal stability assessment for processing window definition
- Research and development in polymer rheology
- Additive and stabilizer effectiveness evaluation
Benefits
- Provides direct melt viscosity data under processing-like conditions
- Enables prediction of processability and flow behavior
- Detects batch-to-batch viscosity variation
- Guides the selection of processing temperatures and pressures
- Identifies thermal degradation risk during processing
- Supports die design and process simulation inputs
Test Process
Sample Preparation
Polymer granules or powder are dried and loaded into the rheometer barrel.
1Melt Conditioning
Polymer is melted and conditioned at the test temperature for a specified equilibration time.
2Shear Sweep
Ram speed is varied over a range of values; pressure drop across the capillary is measured at each speed.
3Viscosity Calculation
Apparent viscosity is calculated; Rabinowitsch and Bagley corrections are applied as needed.
4Technical Specifications
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Capillary Geometry | Controlled L/D ratio (e.g., 20:1, 40:1) |
| Shear Rate Range | 10–10,000 s⁻¹ (typical) |
| Applicable Materials | Thermoplastic polymer melts |
| Output Units | Pa·s (viscosity), Pa (shear stress), s⁻¹ (shear rate) |
| Measured Outputs | Viscosity vs. shear rate curve, thermal stability data |
Instrumentation Used for Testing
- Capillary rheometer (piston-driven)
- Precision capillary dies (various L/D ratios)
- Temperature-controlled barrel and die zone
- Pressure transducer
- Data acquisition and rheology calculation software
- Drying oven for sample conditioning
Results and Deliverables
- Viscosity vs. shear rate flow curves
- Rabinowitsch- and Bagley-corrected viscosity data
- Power law index (n) and consistency index (K)
- Thermal stability (viscosity vs. time) data
- Processing window recommendations
- Compliance reports
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Frequently Asked Questions
ASTM D3835 evaluates rheological behavior of thermoplastics using capillary rheometry. It measures shear response and thermal stability, helping assess processability and performance during extrusion and molding under controlled temperature and shear conditions.
Key parameters include shear rate, temperature, pressure, die geometry, and residence time. Controlled testing ensures accurate measurement of flow behavior and stability of polymer materials during processing.
The test measures viscosity versus shear rate and changes over time. Results indicate flow characteristics, thermal stability, and degradation behavior of thermoplastic materials during processing.
ASTM D3835 applies to thermoplastic materials such as polyethylene, polypropylene, and engineering polymers used in extrusion and injection molding processes requiring precise flow characterization.
ASTM D3835 results depend on test conditions and equipment setup. It may not fully represent all industrial processing environments, requiring correlation with actual manufacturing conditions for accurate material performance evaluation.
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