Abstract
Spunbonding drafters play a decisive role in determining fiber attenuation, morphology, and final nonwoven quality; however, their internal airflow behavior remains poorly characterized due to limited physical accessibility and historically empirical design practices. This work employs high-fidelity computational fluid dynamics (CFD) to systematically resolve the airflow field inside a laboratory-scale drafter and to quantify the impact of geometry on fiber drawing conditions. The simulations reveal a previously unreported "braking effect," where adverse flow structures reduce effective shear drag, limit drawability, and increase the likelihood of fiber breakage. Parametric virtual experimentation across seven geometric variables demonstrates that the drafter configuration strongly governs shear distribution, flow uniformity, and energy consumption. Using a performance-oriented optimization framework, three key processing objectives were targeted: (i) maximizing shear drag to promote stable fiber attenuation, (ii) improving axial drawing uniformity, and (iii) minimizing pressurized-air demand. CFD-guided design modifications-including controlled widening, tailored wall divergence and convergence, and an extensible lower section-were implemented and subsequently validated using a newly constructed prototype. Experimental measurements on polypropylene (PP) and high-density polyethylene (HDPE) fibers confirm substantial reductions in fiber breakage and improvements in drawing stability, thereby demonstrating the effectiveness of simulation-driven process optimization in spunbonding equipment design.