Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
797789 Mechanics of Materials 2009 12 Pages PDF
Abstract

This work addresses the general issue of the mechanical behavior of the confined amorphous phase in rubbery semi-crystalline polymers. The tensile behavior of four semi-crystalline polymers (with various degrees of crystallinity and transition temperatures) was characterized and analyzed at high-temperature (i.e. a few tens degrees below the melting point) and at low strain-rates to try to approach a “relaxed” mechanical behavior. Monotonic loadings followed by different unloading/relaxation/creep stages, and strain-rate jumps experiments were performed on two testing machines equipped with different extensometers.Despite significant differences of micro-structure between the tested materials, a general phenomenon was observed: a non strain-rate sensitive regime was reached both at loading and unloading. However, a “relaxed” equilibrium response cannot account for this regime because of concomitant contradictory features among which (i) the creep and relaxation kinetics which involve the same strain-rates as observed in the non strain-rate sensitive loading regime or (ii) the unusual strain-rate sensitivity observed in strain-rate jump tests.The whole set of experiments has consequences for mechanical modeling. They are discussed as a conclusion of this experimental mechanics work.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Engineering Mechanical Engineering
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