Using the Temperature Shift Factors
When temperature effects are present, the non-Newtonian liquid models use horizontal and vertical shift factors and to adjust viscosity with temperature.

When the simulation is independent of temperature, and . For polymers:
where is the viscosity at temperature and reference temperature .
The horizontal shift factor can be calculated by the Arrhenius model, the Nahme model, or the Williams-Landel-Ferry (WLF) model. The vertical shift factor can be calculated by the Rouse model.
Horizontal Temperature Shift Factor Methods
- Arrhenius
- Exposes the following terms from
Eqn. (733):
- : the activation energy.
- : a reference temperature in K.
Use the Arrhenius model when the temperature is at least 100°C above the glass transition temperature of the polymer.
- Nahme
- Exposes the following terms from
Eqn. (734):
- : the activation energy.
- : a reference temperature in K.
Use the Nahme model when the temperature is close to the reference temperature .
- Williams-Landel-Ferry (WLF)
- Exposes the following terms from
Eqn. (735):
- and : positive empirical constants that depend on the material and the reference temperature. See [24] for tables of values for ,
- : a reference temperature in K.
Use the WLF model when the temperature is close to the glass transition temperature of the polymer.
Vertical Temperature Shift Factor Methods
- Constant
- This is the required method for non-isothermal simulations when the Viscoelastic model is active and its Square-root conformal property is On. The value of the constant must then be set to 1. Any constant value is allowed if the Square root conformal property is Off.
- Rouse
- Exposes the following term from Eqn. (736):
- : a reference temperature in K.