3.3. Effect of Process Factors on Grafting Degree
The experimental design was evaluated using analysis of variance (ANOVA). All effects with a
p-value larger than 0.05 were considered not statistically significant and, consequently, were not used for building the model. The ANOVA is shown in
Table 4. To describe the data set properly, a second-order polynomial response surface model was required which was based on ten highly significant effect terms. The resulting model describes the data set very well (R
2 = 0.989). The high value of R
2adjusted = 0.986 indicates no overfitting of the data although the model equation contained as many as ten statistically significant effect terms. R
2adjusted corrects the coefficient of determination, R
2, by a factor that relates the number of model terms to the number of data points available from the experiment and is calculated by the formula:
where
n is the number of experimental runs,
p is the number of model terms, and R
2 is the coefficient of determination. Since the value of R
2adjusted does not deviate by much from the coefficient of determination, the used model is adequate for the analyzed data set.
The robustness of the model was further evaluated by calculating R
2predicted. R
2predicted is obtained from model cross-validation. It is derived from the Predicted Residual Sum of Squares (PRESS) by finding all structurally identical polynomial models that are obtained by omitting one data point at a time and summing up all squared residuals accordingly. R
2predicted is calculated with the formula:
where
is the sum of the squared differences between each individually measured response value,
, and the overall mean response value,
, and PRESS is the sum of the squared differences between each individually measured response value
and the predicted response value,
from a model calculated by omitting the i*th experimental value for a total of N measurements. Our value for R
2predicted of R
2predicted = 0.977 is also very close to 1.00 and shows only a minor deviation from the coefficient of determination, R
2, which indicates that the model is very robust against variations in single measurements and has high predictive power.
During data analysis, it turned out that five experimental runs had to be removed from the data set since they were identified as outliers with some distorting effect on the model. These experiments are indicated with an asterisk in
Table 3. The experimental runs 4 and 34 were carried out after experiments with a VTMS feed at the highest level. In these two cases, the high VTMS levels had led to unexpected carry-overs of VTMS from the preceding experiments 3 and 33, respectively, even after 20 min of continuous processing using the adjusted settings. This had led to unintentionally high grafting efficiencies of >100%. The experimental runs 8, 11, and 15 also displayed inconsistencies. It turned out that these runs had been carried out after changes of the syringes in the pumping system. In these cases, it was observed that the pumping system had still contained some air bubbles which indicated that the process had not yet stabilized at the time the sample was taken. Therefore, all of these runs were deleted from the data set and were not considered for model building. Generally, experimental runs with comparatively low grafting degrees had displayed more difficulties with the handling.
The model contains significant non-linear terms for the factors VTMS feed (A2) and DTBPH feed (B2), which means that the grafting degree is not just simply directly proportional to the reactant concentrations but seems to be going through a maximum. The model is highly significant with an F-value of 309.90 which yields a p-value < 0.0001 and means that the probability for the observed deviations from linearity due just to random noise is less than 0.01%.
Table 4 makes it very clear that the grafting of VTMS onto EOC is a rather complex process. This is indicated by a large number of highly significant model terms: Four of the five factors studied showed important effects, and only the screw rotational speed seemed to be of no significant effect on the grafting degree. Not only the main factors were relevant, but also four second-order interaction (2FIA) terms turned out to be highly significant which is especially notable. Every process factor was involved in at least one synergistic interaction effect with the VTMS feed rate and the VTMS feed rate was involved in three two-factor interactions. This means that none of the effects of the studied process factors can reasonably be discussed without simultaneously considering the factor level settings of all other process factors except for the screw rotational speed. This is an important conclusion since typically, processes are still studied in a way that does not allow the detection of interaction effects at all. Most of the studies available in the literature proceed by changing the settings of a single factor at different levels while trying to keep all other factors as constant as possible in order to identify the effect of the experimentally varied factor on the targeted responses. Thereby it is tried to isolate an effect experimentally. In contrast, the approach via DoE/RSM pursued in the present contribution is based on isolating the effects of various factors simultaneously simply on a mathematical basis. This approach allows calculation of interaction effects which is not otherwise possible [
24]. In the present case, it was found that the response (grafting degree) not only depended in a non-linear manner on two of the studied factors but also that the system is determined by strong interactions, making it very difficult to control in practice. In this case, appropriate process control cannot be achieved if only single factor variations are taken into account during process development and optimization.
The model equation in terms of coded factors allows identifying the relative impact of all factors by comparing the factor coefficients. The VTMS feed rate (factor A) was found to have the single strongest influence on the response “grafting degree”. It had also a strong non-linear component indicating that the net effect of this factor decreases at higher factor level settings. Factor B, the DTBPH feed, was also found to have a strong positive effect on the grafting degree and a significant negative non-linear contribution, which accounts for the gradual levelling off of the grafting degree at higher levels of DTBPH feed. Both EOC feed rate (factor C) and temperature increase (factor D) had slightly smaller influences on the grafting degree. EOC feed rate (factor C) is the only single factor effect displaying a negative linear contribution, meaning that generally, higher EOC feed rates yield lower overall grafting degrees.
All factor effects depended strongly on the factor level settings of the VTMS feed rate (factor A) since they were all involved in highly significant second-order interaction effects (
Table 4, 2FIA effects of AB, AC, AD). Moreover, DTBPH and EOC feed rate also showed synergistic interaction (
Table 4, 2FIA effect of BC).
The highly significant negative interaction effect of EOC feed rate with VTMS feed rate (i.e., the 2FIA effect AC) means that increasing the polymer feed when reducing the VTMS feed rate always yields lower grafting degrees than reducing the polymer feed and increasing the VTMS feed rate. This is easily understood since, of course, the grafting degree depends on the relative proportions of polymer and grafting reagent. These proportions change unfavorably when an excess of EOC relative to VTMS is employed. Hence, increasing the polymer mass throughput by increasing the EOC feed rate without appropriately adjusting the VTMS feed rate will always result in unsatisfactory grafting degrees.
More interesting is the synergistic interaction between the DTBPH and VTMS feed rates. While both the increase of the DTBPH feed rate and the increase of the VTMS feed rate lead to an increase of the grafting degree, the exact extent of the increase in grafting degree mutually depends on the settings of both parameters. For example, while an increase of the DTBPH feed rate at a high VTMS feed rate leads to a comparatively strong increase in grafting degree, the same increase of the DTBPH feed rate at a low VTMS feed rate only leads to a comparatively small increase in grafting degree. This means that at higher total concentrations of both peroxide radical initiator and crosslinking reagent, disproportionately higher grafting degrees are obtained. In addition, the interactions between VTMS and EOC feed rates (AC) and DTBPH and EOC feed rates (BC) mean that at high feed rates of both free radical initiator and silane, low polymer feed rates lead to favorable concentration ratios in the extruder, which has a positive effect on achieving high grafting degrees. High grafting degrees are thus obtained at a low polymer throughput and high use of modification reagents. In addition, a high-temperature increase rate is especially advantageous for achieving high grafting degrees at high VTMS feed rates (interaction AD) and low EOC feed rates. Under these conditions, the grafting process can be carried out with relatively long contact times of the reagents in the extruder, under favorable concentration ratios and with a high energy input into the system.
The relative magnitudes of the effect terms are summarized in the factor effects equation in terms of coded factors for the grafting degree: For predicting quantitative values for the grafting degrees, the factor effects equation in terms of actual factors is used: This equation allows calculating the grafting degree within the studied range of parameter settings within a 95% confidence interval.
Figure 4 shows the interaction plots for all significant two-factor interaction effects on the response grafting degree. The solid lines show the values predicted by the model and the corresponding confidence intervals. The dots in the graph indicate the actual values from the experiments.
Figure 4a shows the interaction between VTMS and DTBPH feed rates (AB).
Figure 4b shows the interaction between VTMS and EOC feed rates (AC).
Figure 4c shows the interaction between the VTMS feed rate and temperature increase (AD).
Figure 4d shows the interaction between DTBPH and EOC feed rates.
VTMS feed rate and DTBPH feed rate are the most influential factors determining the grafting degree.
Figure 5 summarizes the effects of these two factors and illustrates the wide range of grafting degrees possible with reactive extrusion in 3D plots of the response surfaces and the corresponding contour line plots for two cases: (1) at a low EOC feed rate with a high-temperature increase (
Figure 5a,b), and (2) at a high EOC feed rate with a low-temperature increase (
Figure 5c,d).
The highest possible grafting degree achievable with this process within the factor range studied was calculated to be 5.4%. Values for the grafting degrees found in the literature for similar processes are usually in the range between 1 and 3% [
21]. From the data presented above, it is evident that significantly higher grafting degrees can be obtained for EOC-g-VTMS preparation by a selection of suitable process conditions.
3.4. Effect of Process Factors on Grafting Efficiency
For evaluating the effect of the process parameters on grafting efficiency, as a second response, the consumption of VTMS in comparison to the quantity fed into the process was determined. Again, ANOVA was performed (
Table 5). The resulting model comprised six statistically significant terms and described the data set very well as indicated by the values close to one of all three coefficients of determination (R
2 = 0.952, R
2adjusted = 0.945, and R
2predicted = 0.919).
The VTMS and the DTBPH feed rates were the two most important factors with highly significant effect terms. DTBPH feed rate had also a highly significant non-linear effect term. EOC feed rate was less important with the grafting efficiency. The temperature increase was only weakly statistically significant as was the interaction term between temperature increase and the VTMS feed rate (2FIA effect AD). Again, screw rotational speed had no significant effect at all under the range of conditions used for the reactive extrusion experiments.
To identify the relative impact of the process factor level settings on the grafting efficiency, the model equation was calculated in terms of coded factors:
DTBPH feed rate (factor B) was the single most important factor determining grafting efficiency as indicated by the large values of its linear and non-linear factor effects coefficients. While the positive sign of the linear coefficient means that an increase of the DTBPH feed rate is beneficial for obtaining higher grafting efficiencies, the negative sign of the coefficient for the non-linear factor effect term indicates that the positive influence on the grafting efficiency gradually diminishes with increasing DTBPH feed rate. An increase in DTBPH feed rate leads to an increase in the concentration of radicals in the system. Therefore, it is understandable that more linkage sites are created in the polymer chain to which the silane can be effectively grafted. The non-linear term suggests that an excessive increase of the peroxide radical initiator level leads to a saturation effect due to the higher probability of side reactions such as cross-linking of the EOC or chain scission [
21,
25].
The VTMS feed rate is the second most important factor. It is strongly indirectly proportional to the grafting efficiency. Increasing the VTMS feed rate leads to a substantial decline in grafting efficiency. This is an important finding. While the grafting degree improves with increasing VTMS feed rate, the utilization of the raw material becomes increasingly worse. The higher the VTMS feed rate, the lower the amount of silane that is effectively incorporated into the polymer chain. This characteristic indicates that with increasing VTMS content in the extruder, an increasing proportion of the VTMS is consumed by the known side reaction of auto-polymerization of VTMS [
21,
26] and, hence, is no longer available for grafting.
The effect of temperature increase (factor E) is very low.
Figure 6 shows the interaction effect between VTSM feed rate and temperature increase for the response grafting efficiency. With a value of +1.5033 it is only slightly higher than the effect of temperature increase with +1.4478 and much smaller (roughly, by a factor of 10) than the most relevant factor effect DTBPH feed rate (+14.4222). Hence, its influence on distorting the resulting 3D response surface is rather small.
The grafting efficiency can be calculated using the following equation in actual factor level units:
The combined action of VTMS and DTBPH feed rates on the grafting efficiency is illustrated for intermediate factor level settings of all other factors in the 3D response surface diagram shown in
Figure 7a and the corresponding contour line plot (
Figure 7b).
Detailed data on the grafting efficiency in EOC-g-VTMS grafting are not available from the literature to the best of our knowledge. However, similar grafting reactions are described to yield utilization rates of up to ca. 60% [
21]. The highest possible grafting efficiency of the EOC-g-VTMS grafting process achieved here was >80%.
Figure 7 shows that there is a broad region of possible factor level combinations available in the design space that results in grafting efficiencies well beyond 60%.
3.5. Process Windows for the Grafting Reaction via Reactive Extrusion
The two target responses “grafting degree” and “grafting efficiency” are influenced differently and partly in opposite directions by the investigated process factors. While a high VTMS feed rate improved the achievable grafting degrees, the grafting efficiency, in contrast, declined. It is not possible to achieve both target variables completely satisfactorily at the same time, i.e., the process cannot achieve both a high grafting degree and a high grafting efficiency simultaneously. To operate the process satisfactorily, a compromise must be found between the two target responses in each case. Grafting degree and grafting efficiency depend in a rather complex way on the set levels of all process parameters and the settings of all factors need to be defined in a highly coordinated way in order to achieve desirable pre-defined grafting degrees and grafting efficiencies in the reactive extrusion process. From the analysis of the factors so far, the quantitative correlations for both responses are known. In the next step, the two models are used to optimize both target responses and define suitable process windows.
Both mathematical models for predicting the grafting degree and the grafting efficiency are very appropriate as reflected by the values close to 1.00 of the various coefficients of determination R2, R2adjusted and R2predicted. From the models, it becomes clear that high DTBPH and EOC feed rates are favorable in order to achieve both high grafting degrees and high grafting efficiencies. When low levels in DTBPH feed rates are employed, generally inferior grafting efficiencies and low grafting degrees are obtained that cannot be compensated for by adjustments in the other parameter settings. Since DTBPH acts as a radical starter initiating the grafting reaction, this is understandable.
At a high level of DTBPH feed rate, the VTMS feed can conveniently be used to adjust the process to yield the desired grafting degree and grafting efficiency. The rotational speed of the extruder screw has no influence on the outcome of the process. To be efficient, the silane reagent should always be grafted at least to an extent larger than 60%. This means that only less than 40% of the employed grafting agent remains as “leftover monomer” which needs to be removed during a subsequent purification step.
Figure 8 shows overlay contour plots that allow defining process windows for various scenarios in the grafting of VTMS onto EOC via reactive extrusion.
Two main desirable regions of process factor level combinations that lead to satisfactory grafting results can be identified in the design space: a region with high grafting efficiency and a region with a good grafting degree.
Figure 8a–d show the process windows for high grafting efficiencies (“High Efficiency” regions, HE, colored in red, located in the upper left corner of the design space) and for good grafting degrees (“Good Grafting” regions, GG, colored in yellow, located in the upper right corner of the design space) in dependence of the VTMS and the DTBPH feed rates. Four scenarios are shown: (1) for the high level of EOC feed rate and low-temperature increase (
Figure 8a), (2) for the high level of EOC feed rate and high-temperature increase (
Figure 8b), (3) for the low level of EOC feed rate and a low-temperature increase (
Figure 8c), and (4) for the low level of the EOC feed rate and the high-temperature increase (
Figure 8d). The HE regions include all process parameter settings that lead to utilization rates of VTMS higher than 75%. When defining these process windows, no restrictions were made with regard to the grafting degrees achievable under these process conditions. The GG regions include all process parameter settings that result in grafting degrees greater than 3% (see the blue dotted line in the overlay contour plot at the 3% level). At the same time, the minimum requirement in grafting efficiency of 60% was specified as an additional constraint. This lower limit is indicated by the bold red line in the diagram at the 60% grafting efficiency contour line.
The highest possible grafting efficiencies are achieved at a higher level of the EOC feed rate. Hence, when the process is performed at a high mass throughput in the polymer material to be grafted, process efficiency in terms of VTMS consumption is automatically relatively high up to 80% (
Figure 8a,b). Working at high-temperature increase profiles further extends the range of useful process parameter settings that lead to high process efficiencies towards higher grafting degrees (see the broader process window in
Figure 8b). Thereby, higher grafting degrees are possible while still maintaining relatively high grafting efficiencies (
Figure 8b). In contrast, applying lower temperature increases and at the same time reducing the EOC feed rate (
Figure 8c) leads to generally lower grafting efficiencies and a comparatively more restricted process window for good grafting degrees at reasonable grafting efficiency.
Figure 8d illustrates that the highest possible grafting degrees approach values close to 5% and more. However, such high grafting degrees can only be achieved when accepting a grafting efficiency only slightly above the minimum requirement of 60%. Moreover, the process needs to be performed at the lower end of the spectrum of EOC feed rates (smaller mass throughput in polymer) and at the high level of temperature increase. This makes the process generally more costly when high grafting degrees are aimed for.
If a higher percentage of raw material is to be utilized in the process and a correspondingly smaller excess of grafting reagent is permitted, only lower grafting degrees can be obtained with this manufacturing procedure. If it is aimed at grafting degrees around 3%, the process can be carried out with an efficiency well around 70% under a variety of appropriate manufacturing conditions. The required settings for the process factors are discernable from the diagrams given in
Figure 8. Only low-temperature increases and high EOC feed rates need to be avoided.
Figure 8 clearly shows the possibilities and limitations of the reactive extrusion process for the grafting of VTMS onto EOC. Certainly, the higher the grafting efficiency is, the more cost-effective and environmentally compatible the whole process becomes. However, for better raw material utilization a compromise must be accepted regarding the achievable grafting degrees.
Both grafting efficiency and grafting degree depend very much on DTBPH and VTMS feed rate in a non-linear way. Additionally, there are strong second-order interactions between these two and the other factors. This causes the target responses to be influenced by the process conditions in a complicated manner. For instance, the grafting efficiency can always be significantly increased by increasing the DTBPH feed rate while maintaining the same VTMS feed rate. It always increases by about 15% when the DTBPH feed rate is doubled. Similarly, the grafting degree also always increases with increasing the DTBPH feed rate. However, the extent to which the latter is increased depends on all other process parameter settings as well simultaneously. If, for example, at a low-temperature increase and low EOC feed rate, the DTBPH feed rate is doubled from 1 g/h to 2 g/h at a VTMS feed rate of 40 g/h, the grafting efficiency of the process is increased from approx. 55–60% to significantly more than 70% (
Figure 8c). This is accompanied by a simultaneous moderate increase in the grafting degree from approx. 2% to 2.6% by roughly 0.6%. In contrast, at a VTMS feed rate of 80 g/h, the grafting degree increases by significantly more than 1% from approx. 3% to >4% while the grafting efficiency at these settings again increases by ca. 15%. Unfortunately, the grafting efficiency is significantly worse at higher VTMS feed rates than at low ones.
Figure 8c shows that doubling the VTMS feed rate from 40 to 80 g/h reduces the grafting efficiency at 1g/h DTBPH feed rate to about 45%. This means that at twice the VTMS feed rate, doubling the DTBPH feed rate does not result in any net gain in process efficiency but mainly compensates for the loss in grafting efficiency brought about by increasing the VTMS feed rate. In other words, at higher grafting degrees, the generally poorer grafting efficiency can only be insufficiently increased by increasing the chemical dosing rates. This automatically leads to a systematically more inefficient process if higher grafting degrees are targeted, and the decline in grafting efficiency can no longer be compensated for satisfactorily by suitable selection of the settings of the control variables.