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EBB 220/3 FAILURE IN POLYMERS

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EBB 220/3 FAILURE IN POLYMERS DR AZURA A.RASHID Room 2.19 School of Materials And Mineral Resources Engineering, Universiti Sains Malaysia, 14300 Nibong Tebal, P. Pinang – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: EBB 220/3 FAILURE IN POLYMERS


1
EBB 220/3FAILURE IN POLYMERS
  • DR AZURA A.RASHID
  • Room 2.19
  • School of Materials And Mineral Resources
    Engineering,
  • Universiti Sains Malaysia, 14300 Nibong Tebal, P.
    Pinang
  • Malaysia

2
Importance of mechanical properties of materials
in engineering
  • Need to acquire knowledge of the properties of
    materials ? The correct selection of a material
    for a given application.
  • Mechanical properties data were used to predict
    the response of materials under mechanical loads.
  • Expressed in terms of forces which may deform
    materials or even cause them to fail completely.
  • To avoid failure and keep deformation under
    control so the individual system components
    remain functional as parts of a whole ? need a
    various considerations
  • Is stiffness / rigidity important? (i.e. minimum
    deformation under a given load)
  • Is strength essential? (for maximum tolerance of
    loads before failure)

3
  • The questions we may have to ask are
  • What is the nature of the load?
  • Continuous and uniform or rising steadily
  • IMPACT (e.g. hammering action, accidental drop)-
    Alternating (periodic application of a force)
  • FATIGUE (e.g. vibration, rotation in loaded
    components)
  • The geometry of the loaded component ? can be
    designed to deal with these conditions.
  • The physical nature of the material ? has to
    ensure that the component can survive in service.
  • Cost and component weight ? when evaluating and
    selecting materials, with the use of indices such
    as
  • Modulus-to-density ratio
  • design for stiffness, in weight-critical
    applications ?example an aircraft

4
Fundamental concepts for mechanical properties
  • Below are some terms we find in dealing with
    materials in relation to structural applications
  • Stress
  • Strength
  • Strain
  • Stress-strain relationships
  • Modulus
  • Concept of deformation
  • Deformations can be produced by forces ? which
    cause a body to be stretched, compressed, twisted
    or sheared.
  • These forces can also be combined to produce more
    complex types of deformation ? for example
    flexural.

5
Unloaded
Stretched (Tension)
Squeezed (Compression)
Twisted (Torsional shear)
Cut (Simple shear)
6
  • Extension by stretching in one direction ?the
    simplest type of deformation that can be used to
    explain key concepts in mechanics

Rectangular specimens subjected to different
loads in tensile mode
7
Stress
  • Stress is the force exerted on a body per unit
    cross sectional area.
  • By stretching a body using a force (the force is
    weight), the tensile stress (in the direction of
    elongation)?
  • If the force applied is 100 N (Newtons), and the
    cross sectional area measures 0.0004 m2 (square
    metres), the stress becomes
  • or 250 KN/m2, or 0.25 MN/m2. If the force doubles
    (200 N), stress will increase accordingly to 500
    kN/m2.
  • We could also double the level of stress by
    reducing the cross sectional area to half of its
    original value, i.e. to 0.0002 m2.

8
  • If the same weights were placed on the
    rectangular specimens to cause a contraction in
    the longitudinal direction ? the resulting stress
    would be called compressive stress.
  • The other common type of stress is shear stress.
  • This relates to the force which distorts rather
    than extends a body ? example where a solid
    section is sheared,
  • Shear forces can also result in failure.

Cylindrical specimen subjected to simple shear,
e.g. during cutting.
Everyday example of shear failure
9
Strength
  • Concept of strength ? the influence of the
    cross-sectional area on the force which
    ultimately causes the material to fail.
  • Strength defined ? the highest stress that a
    material can withstand before it completely fails
    to perform structurally.
  • If the applied force is tensile (stretch) ? the
    ultimate stress is known as tensile strength
    (i.e., maximum tensile stress that the material
    can tolerate).
  • Others types of strength are related to the mode
    of the applied force ?compressive, shear,
    torsional and flexural.
  • Use the following expressions
  • A strong material ? can withstand a very high
    force per unit area before it fails.
  • A weak material ? markedly deteriorates or fails
    at relatively low levels of applied forces.

10
Strain
  • To understand the effect of specimen size on the
    amount of deformation resulting from force ?use
    the concept of strain.
  • Strain ? the change in one dimension produced as
    a result of an applied force and it is expressed
    as the ratio of the amount of deformation to the
    samples original dimension.
  • In the case of tension,
  • Strain is often expressed as i.e. the strain
    multiplied by 100.
  • Assuming the force applied causes the original
  • length of 0.5 m to extent to a new length of 0.9
    m ?
  • then the strain becomes

11
Stress-strain relationship (below failure
conditions)
  • Materials deform elastically or inelastically.
  • During elastic deformation ? the stress in a body
    is directly related to the strain, and
    vice-versa.
  • When the force is removed (i.e. when stress
    becomes zero) then strain returns to zero.
  • The plot of stress against strain produces a
    straight line ?
  • the stress can be increased or decreased, and
  • stress and strain are always proportional to
    each other.

Linear elastic stress-strain relationship
12
  • For ductile materials ? increasing the stress
    above a certain limit will give rise to inelastic
    deformations, known as yielding.
  • when the stress is removed ? the strain does
    not return to zero (and the original shape is not
    fully restored)
  • some deformation has permanently set in.
  • The stress level at which this occurs is referred
    to as the yield stress or yield point.
  • The applied force takes the material
  • beyond the linear elastic region.
  • Continued loading causes permanent
  • deformation.

The amount of permanent deformation is evident
after the force applied is removed.
13
Modulus
  • The relationship between stress and strain is
    expressed in terms of a property called the
    Modulus (or Young Modulus).
  • The linear portion of the stress-strain curve can
    be used to determine the modulus ? correspond to
    the slope of the curve before the yield point, up
    to which all deformation is elastic and
    recoverable.
  • In other words,
  • The slope (modulus) ? at any point in the linear
    portion of the line gives the same result.
  • The modulus ?denotes stiffness or rigidity for
    any kind of applied load, i.e. tension,
    compression or shear.
  • Stiff materials have a high modulus ? the
    deformation (strain) resulting from the applied
    force (stress) is low.
  • Flexible materials have a low modulus ? undergo
    large deformations with relatively low applied
    forces.
  • Modulus of Elasticity ? for materials deformed
    in tension or compression.
  • Modulus of Rigidity ?used to express the
    resistance to shear or torsion.

14
Assessment of mechanical properties
  • The simple tests used to measure mechanical
    properties are described in standard test
    methods.
  • The most widely used are the ASTM tests ?
    nowadays these are gradually being replaced by
    ISO procedures
  • The most common types of test performed on
    plastic materials
  • Tensile properties
  • Flexural properties
  • Impact strength

15
Tensile properties
  • Tensile properties are determined using
    dumbbell-shaped specimens.
  • The type defined in the ASTM D-638 standard is
    as shown in the diagram below
  • In a tensile experiment the specimen is gripped
    firmly by mechanical jaws at the wide portion on
    either side and extended by means of a tensile
    testing machine
  • The pulling is normally carried out at a constant
    rate of 0.50, 5.0 and 50 cm/min, depending on the
    type of plastic being tested.
  • The low speeds ? to test rigid materials
  • the higher speeds ? to test flexible materials.

16
  • Calculated entities
  • Tensile stress ? measured the force at any time
    divided by the original cross sectional area of
    the waist portion.
  • Tensile strain ? the ratio of the difference in
    length between the length marked by the gauge
    marks and the original length,
  • Yield strength sY ?ultimate tensile strength
    (strength value prior to fracture), st
  • Elastic modulus, E ? ultimate elongation (strain
    value at fracture), et

Typical stress-strain curves for a brittle
material (1) and a ductile material (2)
Note that in the diagram above yield stress
is only specified for the ductile material ?as
the brittle material fails catastrophically
without reaching the yielding conditions.
17
Flexural properties
  • Flexural properties are important in assessing
    the resistance of materials to bending.
  • A typical experimental set-up is as the one shown
    in the schematic below
  • Specimen dimensions may vary but the use of bars
    with a cross section measuring 1.27 0.32 cm and
    span of 5.0 cm.

Flexural test experimental set-up
18
Calculated entities
  • The maximum stress caused by bending is
    calculated by the following formula
  • where
  • S stress (N/m2)
  • F load or force at break or at yield (N)
  • L span of specimen between supports (m)
  • b width (m)
  • d thickness (m)
  • If the load recorded corresponds to the value at
    failure occurs ? S corresponds to the flexural
    strength.
  • The maximum strain due to bending (compression
    and tensile is estimated by
  • where
  • e strain (dimensionless i.e., no units)
  • D deflection at the centre of the beam (m)
    see schematic below
  • d thickness (m)
  • L specimens length of span between supports
    (m)
  • The flexural modulus from the recorded load (F)
    and deflection (D) is

19
Impact strength
  • The energy used by the pendulum hammer to
    fracture the specimen (see diagram) is given by
    the reduction in the height of the hammer in its
    swing after fracturing the specimen ?
  • Where
  • m mass of pendulum hammer
  • g acceleration due to gravity (9.8 m/s2)
  • ho initial height of pendulum hammer (m)
  • hf height of the pendulum hammer after
    fracturing specimen
  • The specimen geometry is taken into account in
    terms of the cross-sectional area which has
    undergone fracture.
  • The impact strength is defined as the energy
    divided by the area ? joules/m2.
  • Note Because the distance from the notch tip to
    the edge of the specimen is constant, sometimes
    the impact strength is expressed as the energy to
    fracture per unit thickness.

20
Charpy test configuration
Apparatus to measure impact strength
Izod test configuration
21
Deformation of polymers
  • Permanent deformations ? Yielding
  • Mechanical properties at the surface ? Hardness,
    Friction, Wear
  • Special issues in designing with polymers ?Creep
    and Stress Relaxation
  • Factors that determine the resistance of
    polymeric components to deformation
  • Enhancement of the resistance of polymers to
    deformation

22
Yielding of polymers
  • Yielding is a phenomenon closely related to the
    onset of permanent deformation, i.e. an
    irreversible process.
  • This is due to molecular chains unfolding and
    becoming aligned in the direction of the applied
    load.
  • Yielding under a tensile load is shown below
  • The progress of the yielding process for a
    specimen under tension 
  • A prior to loading
  • B onset of necking in the waist
  • region after the yield point
  • C neck propagation ("cold drawing")
  • D neck extension and fracture

23
  • In non-crystalline (amorphous) polymers ?
    yielding occurs by molecular uncoiling.
  • At the yield point ? a neck forms which is
    followed by an overall drop in stress.
  • At the neck region ? the folded chains become
    aligned.
  • Macroscopically ? because of the thinning down
    in cross section,
  • the stress rises locally and any deformation
    occurs preferentially there.
  • This helps the neck propagate along the waist of
    the specimen under a steady load ?a process known
    as cold drawing
  • Any deformation produced beyond the yield point
    ?is not recoverable.
  • In a crystalline polymer ?
  • the unfolding of chains begins in the amorphous
    regions between the lamellae of the crystals.
  • this is followed by breaking-up and alignment of
    crystals

24
Alignment of molecular chains in polymer
crystals progress A-D same as aforementioned
25
  • Points to note
  • Yielding is a ? phenomenon which is responsible
    for ductile deformations,
  • as opposed to brittle fracture.
  • the degree of ductility of a polymer ? often
    controlled by a number of variables

26
  • The deformation behaviour of polymers is time and
    temperature dependent, ? specimen may be ductile
    or brittle, according to the testing conditions
    strain rate and temperature.
  • If the temperature is sufficiently high and/or
    the strain rate is slow enough ?
  • the specimen is ductile and will yield
    extensively.
  • The yield stress and stiffness increase and
    ductility decreases with lowering the temperature
    or increasing the strain rate.
  • Under extreme strain rates, as under impact
    conditions ? specimen may be unable to undergo
    cold drawing and become brittle

Tensile stress-strain behaviour at high strain
rate and/or low temperature(A) low strain rate
and/or high temperature (B)
27
Hardness, Friction Wear
  • These three surface-related properties are less
    frequently dealt with in theoretical
    interpretations than fundamental properties such
    as modulus, viscoelasticity and yielding,
  • but they are very important in applications that
    involve sliding contact and frictional motions.
  • Gears, bearings, piston rings and seals are
    examples of applications where these properties
    are of great significance.
  • The properties are
  • Hardness
  • Friction
  • Wear

28
Hardness
  • Hardness ? more appropriately described as
    resistance to abrasion, cutting, machining or
    scratching.
  • Related to fundamental bulk properties ? such as
    yield strength and modulus.
  • Standardized techniques to measure hardness ?
    based on the degree of penetration into a
    specimen by hard indenters of conical or
    spherical shape.

The hardness test
29
Friction
  • Friction is the resistance offered by a surface
    to the relative motion of objects in contact.
  • The frictional force opposing movement is
    described by the formula
  • The coefficient of friction, m, ? is a property
    of the material which determines its resistance
    to sliding action against another surface.
  • Friction arises from temporary adhesive contacts
    between the two surfaces
  • It is overcome through the rupture of these
    contacts by local plastic deformations.
  • Compressive yield strength shear strength of
    the contacting materials are important in
    friction abrasion.
  • In viscoelastic polymers ? local rises in
    temperature resulting from shearing at higher
    loads and sliding velocities cause the
    coefficient to increase.
  • In bearing applications ? where a metal and a
    thermoplastic are in contact, increases in
    pressure and the sliding velocity will increase m
    and limited by the conditions during service.

30
Wear
  • Wear occurs ? when material is lost from the
    interface between the contact surfaces during
    relative motion.
  • At low temperatures ? primary mechanism for wear
    damage is adhesive wear, whereby fine particles
    are removed from the surface.
  • Since polymers overheat through friction ? more
    severe damage can result as larger volumes of
    locally melted material can be extracted from the
    surface.
  • Temperature is also expected to adversely affect
    the wear rates.
  • High-strength ductile engineering thermoplastics
    such as nylon and acetal, offer good wear
    performance ? can be further improved with the
    addition of internal lubricants or reinforcing
    additives
  • Fibre reinforcements (e.g., glass fabric) and
    mineral fillers (e.g., calcium carbonate (CaCO3)
    may be compounded into the base polymers to
    improve their load-carrying capacity ? but can
    increase friction and give rise to more
    detrimental abrasive wear.
  • Very high molecular weights have a positive
    effect in reducing wear ? UHMWPE (Ultra High
    Molecular Weight Polyethylene).

31
Creep Stress relaxation
  • A serious challenge when designing products to be
    made from polymeric materials is the prediction
    of performance over long periods of time.
  • The amount of deformation after short or long
    term loading has to be known reasonably
    accurately in advance, i.e. at the design stage.
  • During long term service, creep and stress
    relaxation are the main deformation mechanisms
    that can be cause for concern.

32
Creep
  • Creep phenomena are particularly common in
    polymers.
  • Creep occurs when a force is continuously applied
    on a component ? causing it to deform gradually.
  • For polymers,
  • the delayed response of polymer chains during
    deformations ?cause creep behaviour
  • Deformation stops when the initially folded
    chains reach a new equilibrium configuration
    (i.e. slightly stretched).
  • This deformation is recoverable after the load is
    removed,
  • but recovery takes place slowly with the chains
    retracting by folding back to their initial
    state.
  • The rate at which polymers creep depends not only
    on the load, but also on temperature.
  • In general, a loaded component creeps faster at
    higher temperatures.

33
Time dependence
  • If a load is slowly applied to a polymeric body ?
    the chains in the polymer have time to unfold and
    stretch.
  • There are three main ways of presenting creep
    data to be presented as
  • Creep curves Strain versus the logarithm of time
    elapsed (various curves at constant load, or
    stress)
  • Isochronous curves Stress versus strain (various
    curves at constant time of duration of load)
  • Isometric curves Stress versus the logarithm of
    elapsed time (various curves at constant strain
    values)

34
Temperature dependence
  • The temperature at which a polymeric body is
    loaded ? very important to its mechanical
    behaviour.
  • Low temperatures ? imply low internal energy
    within the molecules.
  • Polymer chains are less energetic (more sluggish)
    and also more reluctant to move under a force.
  • Makes it more difficult for them to unfold ?their
    ability to undergo large deformations is
    suppressed.
  • In this state ? polymers are more likely to
    resist the applied load and stiffer.
  • Higher temperatures ?the energy level of chains
    favours their movement, so unfolding is easier.
  • A given amount of deformation requires a lower
    force and a force of a given magnitude produces a
    larger deformation.
  • Rising temperature and above the glass transition
    temperature, Tg, ?solid polymers become softer
    and progress through the rubbery state to finally
    become a viscous melt capable of flow.
  • The term "rubbery" ? refers to the ability to
    deform sluggishly, but the deformations recover
    when the load is removed.
  • The term "glassy ? relates to the hardness,
    stiffness and brittleness of the polymer at low
    temperatures. 

35
The diagram below describes the variation of the
deformability of polymers over a wide range
of temperatures
Typical effect of temperature on the
deformability (reverse of stiffness / rigidity)
of a polymer
36
Stress Relaxation
  • Stress relaxation is almost exclusively a
    characteristic of polymeric materials and is a
    consequence of delayed molecular motions as in
    creep.
  • stress relaxation occurs when
  • deformation (or strain) is constant and
  • manifested by a reduction in the force (stress)
    required to maintain a constant deformation.

37
Failure in Polymers
  • Modes of mechanical failure
  • Types of mechanical failure Creep Rupture,
    Fatigue, Impact
  • Factors that determine the mode of failure of
    polymers
  • Enhancement of the resistance of polymers to
    failure

38
Modes of Mechanical Failures
  • Failure analysis and prevention ? important
    functions to all of the engineering disciplines.
  • The materials engineer ? plays a lead role in the
    analysis of failures, whether a component or
    product fails in service or if failure occurs in
    manufacturing or during production processing.
  • Must determine the cause of failure to prevent
    future occurrence, and/or to improve the
    performance of the device, component or
    structure.
  • Failure in a product implies ? the product no
    longer functions satisfactorily.
  • Mechanical failure in polymer materials ? caused
    by
  • Excessive deformation
  • Ductile failure
  • Brittle failure
  • Crazing

39
  • Excessive deformation
  • Very large deformations are possible in
    low-modulus polymers ? are able to accommodate
    large strains before failure.
  • Such deformations could occur without fracture ?
    design features and other considerations might
    only tolerate deformations to a prescribed
    ceiling value.
  • The case in rubbery thermoplastics, such as
    flexible PVC or EVA, for pressurized tubing.
  • Ductile failure
  • Encountered in materials that are able to undergo
    large-scale irreversible plastic deformation
    under loading, known as yielding, before
    fracturing.
  • Yielding marks the onset of failure ? setting the
    upper limit to stress in service to be below the
    yield point is common practice.
  • Estimate loading conditions ?likely to cause
    yielding (yield criteria), in order to design
    components with a view to avoid it in service.

40
  • Brittle failure
  • This is a type of failure ? involves low strains
    accompanied by negligible permanent deformation
    and is frequently characterized by "clean"
    fracture surfaces.
  • It occurs in ? components that contain
    geometrical discontinuities that act as stress
    concentrations.
  • These physical features ? the effect of locally
    raising stress. Effective stress concentrating
    discontinuities are usually in the form of
  • cracks,
  • badly distributed or
  • oversized additive particulates,
  • impurities etc.
  • Contrary to ductile failures ? plastic
    deformation provides a warning signal for the
    ultimate fracture,
  • Brittle failures can occur without prior warning,
    ?except for the formation of crazes, as in glassy
    thermoplastics.
  • Because of this ? design specifications based on
    fracture strength data tend to be conservative
    (e.g., will incorporate very large safety
    margins) with respect to the maximum stress
    levels allowed relative to the strength.

41
  • Crazing
  • Crazing is a phenomenon that often occurs in
    glassy polymers before yielding,? i.e. for
    deformation at temperatures below the glass
    transition.
  • It occurs at ? a strain level which is below the
    level required for brittle fracture and although
    undesirable, this type of "failure" is not
    catastrophic.
  • Crazing is often observed in highly strained
    regions during bending.
  • Crazes are made up of microcavities whose
    surfaces are joined by highly oriented, or
    fibrillar, material.
  • They are initiated near structural
    discontinuities, such as impurities, and are
    collectively visible at the strained surface
    because they become large enough to reflect
    light.
  • Crazes are not cracks and can continue to sustain
    loads after they are formed.
  • However, they can transform into cracks via the
    breakage of the fibrils.

42
A short film illustrates tensile tests on
plastics. The transparent sample is polystyrene
and shows the formation of crazes, as the
horizontal lines across the width of the specimen
before fracture.
43
Types of Failures
  • Because of the viscoelastic character of
    polymers ? no failure can be described
  • entirely ductile or
  • entirely brittle.
  • The proportion of each type of fracture involved
    in polymer failure depends on many factors
  • the speed (and time) of loading and
  • the temperature of the sample.
  • The type of stress, for instance, whether static
    or dynamic (fluctuating), determine the mode of
    failure.
  • Below are links to the most common of rupture
  • Creep Rupture
  • Fatigue Failure
  • Impact Failure

44
Creep rupture
  • Creep rupture is the culmination in the
    deformation process of creep.
  • The result of creep is a slow increase in
    deformation, which ultimately leads to fracture
    when the polymer chains can no longer accommodate
    the load.
  • The level of stress,
  • the service temperature,
  • the component geometry,
  • the nature of the material and
  • any defects induced by the fabrication process
  • are all decisive factors in determining the
    time taken for fracture to occur.
  • Although the precise details of the failure
    mechanism that precedes rupture in creep are
    unclear ? it is known that locally,
  • stress reaches high enough levels for
    microcracks to form.
  • These propagate in a slow stable manner,
    gradually reducing their ability to sustain the
    load.
  • It is worth noting that the ultimate failure in
    creep may be preceded by shear yielding, i.e. the
    creation of a neck, or by crazing.

45
Fatigue failure
  • Fatigue is a failure process ?which a crack grows
    as a result of cyclic loading.
  • This type of loading involves ? stresses that
    alternate between high and low values over time.
  • The stress values may be entirely positive
    (tensile), entirely negative (compressive), or a
    combination of the two (see diagram).

Cyclic stress that gives rise to fatigue in
materials
46
  • However, the effect of fatigue increases with
    higher tensile Cyclic stress that gives rise to
    fatigue in materials
  • Once a crack is initiated ? it propagates by
    small steps during the tensile portion of a
    stress cycle.
  • The crack grows slowly but steadily up to the
    point where the remaining area of the parts
    section is unable to support the load.
  • The subsequent failure is invariably brittle.
  • Failure prediction
  • The stresses involved in fatigue are ? much lower
    than the value required to cause outright
    failure.
  • Final failure is only possible by cumulative
    damage.
  • The initial crack from which the damage starts is
    either
  • pre-existing (i.e., mechanically generated or
    fabrication imperfection) or
  • initiated by high local stress at weak regions in
    the material.
  • A suitably large flaw or weak enough region lies
    in an adequately stressed region of loaded
    components may vary according to

47
  • The nature of stress in fatigue
  • The amplitude of the stress ? the variation in
    stress between the maximum and minimum values,
    affects the speed of propagation of the crack,
    because
  • it determines the amount by which a crack makes a
    step forward during each stress cycle.
  • higher stress amplitudes with a high positive
    mean stress decrease the time, or cycles, to
    failure.
  • The frequency of the stress ? stress alternates
    between maximum and minimum, also affects the
    time to failure as it causes the step-like
    propagation of the crack to advance more rapidly.

48
  • Parameters in cyclic (alternating) stress
  • The fatigue in polymers is subject to
    complications because of viscoelasticity in
    polymers.
  • This causes damping of the alternating load, a
    process which itself creates heat.
  • This heat is dissipated with difficulty because
    of the generally low thermal conductivity of the
    polymers.
  • The rate of heat production due to an increase in
    stress amplitude
  • and/or frequency becomes lower than the rate of
    heat dissipation, and so stored heat causes the
    temperature in the material to rise.
  • At sufficiently high temperatures the polymer may
    overheat and fail not through fatigue but rather
    through creep or heat softening,
  • whereby the modulus decreases to the extent that
    the material is unsuitable for its intended use.

49
Impact failure
  • The type of loading that constitutes an impact is
    what could be described as a "knock" or "blow",
  • a force applied very fast, capable of causing
    failure by brittle fracture.
  • Is achieved is through the transfer of the energy
    of impact to defects in the structure ? then grow
    rapidly.
  • Accidental occurrence of impact makes resistance
    to this type of abuse an important one ?
    especially for materials used in critical
    applications.
  • Impact strength is the typical parameter quoted
    in order to characterize resistance to impact.
  • However the conditions under which impact is
    experienced are crucial to the relevance of this
    data.

50
In general, resistance to fracture through impact
is affected by the following
51
  • Factors relevant to the ductility of polymers
    have the same effect on impact resistance ? the
    time and temperature dependence of polymers limit
    the ability of chains to "give" under impact
    (very high strain rate) conditions by undergoing
    compensating molecular motion.
  • An important exception to the ductility and
    impact toughness is ? use of fibre reinforcement
    in composites, where impact strength is improved.
  • the energy of impact is expended on diverting the
    crack along the fibre-matrix interface.
  • Although some debonding of fibres occurs in the
    process ?catastrophic failure is largely
    prevented.
  • The factors that increase the possibility of
    embrittlement ? lead to decreases in impact
    strength.
  • The presence of notches ?lowers the energy
    requirements of fracture by highly concentrating
    the stress of impact locally ? ? stress
    concentrations.
  • The size and shape of the notch (i.e., whether
    blunt or sharp) is critical ? in determining the
    impact strength obtained from tests.
  • Polymers such as rigid PVC, polycarbonate, some
    members of the polyamide family, polymethyl
    methacrylate (acrylic) ?significantly affected by
    the notch condition and are often described as
    notch sensitive.

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Factors that affect the mode of polymer Failure
  • The following factors affect polymer fracture
    behavior adversely by promoting the brittle type
    of mechanism
  • Loading Conditions
  • Environmental
  • Material structure aspects
  • 1. Loading conditions
  • Very fast loading as in the case of impacts
  • Triaxiality of stress the development of
    stresses in more directions relative to the one
    from which a load is applied
  • triaxial stresses promote brittle failure in
    materials.
  • this 3D type of stress system appears at
    discontinuities (stress concentrations) within a
    component.
  •  

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  • 2. Environmental
  • Low temperature
  • can bring a transition in fracture mode from
    ductile to brittle ? experienced by a material
    when the temperature falls below a point known as
    the ductile-brittle transition temperature, TDB.
  • Deterioration of physical properties ? as a
    result of chemical changes to molecular structure
    through
  • Oxidation reactions with substances such as
    oxidizing acids and water moisture
  • Weathering the combined effect of exposure to
    u.v. radiation and oxygen
  • Degradation ?due to exposure to excessive heat,
    particularly in the presence of oxygen
  • Environmental Stress Cracking ingress to defect
    sites within the material of normally
    non-aggressive liquids (mostly organic) that
    promote fracture at low levels of stress and over
    short periods of time.
  • 3. Material structure aspects
  • Discontinuous microstructure ? arising from the
    presence of
  • particulate additives
  • crystallinity in the polymer

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Improving the resistance of polymers to failures
  • To minimize the risk of catastrophic failure ? a
    material needs to be tough as well as ductile.
  • The mechanical design ? has a role in avoiding
    the incorporation of features that promote the
    likelihood of brittle fracture.
  • The following guidelines ? to identify the steps
    to enhance the failure resistance of polymers in
    service
  • Design considerations
  • Material Selection
  • Material Modification
  •  
  • Design considerations
  • Design for a particular set of stress conditions
    anticipated in service ? example
  • attention to section thicknesses, and
  • utilisation of material data obtained under
    conditions relevant to service (creep, fatigue,
    impact)
  • Elimination of the majority of stress-concentratin
    g design features ?abrupt changes in section,
    holes, notches

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  • Material Selection
  • Should be based structural aspects affecting
    failure, as well as physical and chemical issues
    arising from the use of polymers in a particular
    environment such as the effect of temperature,
    oxidants and aggressive liquids.
  • Given that the most important properties
    affecting resistance to brittle fracture are
    toughness and ductility,
  • key material data to be used in design in order
    to minimise the likelihood of brittle fracture
    should include
  • ductility indicators (e.g., energy absorption
    values obtained directly by measuring the area
    under load-extension curves obtained in tensile
    tests which are carried out to failure (see
    schematic).
  • Energy absorption values derived from impact
    tests

Energy absorbed during extension
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  • Material Modification
  • Toughening through microstructural modification
    of thermoplastics
  • Based on the principle that the energy which
    contributes to brittle fracture can be dissipated
    by localized yielding ahead of the crack tip ?
    possible to produce toughened thermoplastic
    polymers by the incorporation of a partially
    compatible rubbery phase.
  • This is typically accomplished
  • (a) at the polymerisation stage by
    copolymerisation, and by
  • (b) direct blending (e.g. mixing acrylic rubber
    with PVC or with PBT.
  • The success of the toughening of thermoplastics
    by rubber modification depends on
  • the rubber existing as well dispersed discrete
    particles
  • the interfacial adhesion between the
    thermoplastic matrix and the rubber being at an
    optimum level (i.e., neither too strong nor too
    weak)
  • the glass transition temperature of the rubber
    phase ? lower than the service temperature.

57
Example of the exams question
  • The failures of polymeric materials can be affect
    by a few factors. Discuss two of this factors.
    failure?
  • There are a few types of failures in polymeric
    materials such as creep rupture, fatigue and
    impact. Based on your understanding, discuss two
    of this mechanical failures and how this failures
    can be describe as brittle or ductile deformation

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