Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
5205875 Polymer Testing 2016 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

Processing conditions have a strong effect on the final mechanical properties of products made of polymeric materials. Relevant phenomena most commonly include thermal stresses, physical ageing, frozen-in strains and molecular orientation. In this work, two different high-impact polystyrenes, processed by thermoforming, were considered: a “standard” one and a grade specifically resistant to Environmental Stress Cracking (ESC). The main effect induced by thermoforming was molecular orientation. The local degree of orientation was measured on a thermoformed product and its effect on the material ESC behavior in sunflower oil was studied. A Fracture Mechanics approach was applied to evaluate the fracture resistance of the two materials. Results show that a higher degree of orientation increases the fracture resistance in air but has no effect on the (expectedly lower) resistance in the active oil environment.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Chemistry Organic Chemistry
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