Polymer Science and Analysis MATS545: by Dr. Igor Krupa, QAPCO Polymer Chair, Center For Advanced Materials, QU
Polymer Science and Analysis MATS545: by Dr. Igor Krupa, QAPCO Polymer Chair, Center For Advanced Materials, QU
1
Class 6: Physics of solid polymers
.
i.) Types of mechanical deformation
ii.)Tensile deformation
iii.) Elastic and plastic behavior
iv.) Flexural and shear deformation
v.) Impact strength
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)
5
ELASTIC DEFORMATION
1. Initial 2. Small load 3. Unload
bonds
stretch
return to
initial
F
6
PLASTIC DEFORMATION
1. Initial 2. Small load 3. Unload
Modulus of Elasticity, E:
(Young's modulus)
s=Ee
` Hooke's Law
8
ENGINEERING STRESS
• Tensile stress, s: • Shear stress, t:
Ft
s
Ao
original area
before loading Stress has units:
N/m2 or lb/in2
9
ENGINEERING STRAIN
• Tensile strain: • Lateral strain:
/2
Lo
wo
W0 is an initial width of sample
/2
L/2 L/2
• Shear strain:
/2
/2 /2
10
LINEAR ELASTIC PROPERTIES
• Modulus of Elasticity, E:
(also known as Young's modulus)
• Hooke's Law:
s=Ee
• Poisson's ratio, n:
metals: n ~ 0.33
ceramics: ~0.25
polymers: ~0.40
rubbers: ~ 0.50
Units:
E: [GPa] or [psi]
n: dimensionless 11
OTHER ELASTIC PROPERTIES
t M
• Elastic Shear
modulus, G:
G simple
1 torsion
t=G test
M
• Elastic Bulk P
modulus, K:
P P
pressure
test: Init.
vol =Vo.
• Special relations for isotropic materials: Vol chg.
= DV
E E
G K
2(1 n) 3(1 2n)
12
Tensile stress-strain test
13
13
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.
14
Nonlinear Tensile deformation of polymers
In an undeformed
thermoplastic polymer
tensile sample,
(a) the polymer chains are
randomly oriented.
(b) When a stress is
applied, a neck
develops as chains
become aligned locally.
The neck continues to
grow until the chains in
the entire gage length
have aligned.
(c) The strength of the
polymer is increased
15
Tensile deformation of thermoplastic polymers
Yield point
16
TENSILE RESPONSE
stress
Semi-crystalline Increasing strain rate
60 polymer: PMMA
20°C
s, MPa
(Plexiglas)
40 40°C
20
Increasing temperature
60°C
0
0 0.1 0.2 e 0.3 strain
• Decreasing T • Increasing strain rate
-- increases E -- same effects as
-- increases tensile strength decreasing T. 18
-- decreases elongation
Effect of Temperature on the Stress-strain
Curve for Cellulose Acetate
The large drop in strength and the large increase in ductility with a relatively small
increase in temperature.
19
Mechanical Behavior of Polymers
Behavior of polymers as a function of temperature and (a) degree of crystallinity and (b) cross-
linking. The combined elastic and viscous behavior of polymers is known as viscoelasticity. 20
Modulus (Young 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.
• Hook’s law s=Ee
• 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.
109 Pa 20 GFRE*
CFRE*
Graphite GFRE( fibers)*
10
8 CFRE( fibers)*
6 AFRE( fibers)*
Polyester
4 PET
PS
PC Epoxy only
2
PP
1 HDPE
0.8
0.6 Wood( grain)
PTFE
0.4
0.2 LDPE
23
YIELD STRENGTH, sy
• Stress at which noticeable plastic deformation has
occurred.
when ep = 0.002
tensile stress, s
sy
engineering strain, e
ep = 0.002
(plastic strain, elongation at yield)
24
YIELD STRENGTH: COMPARISON
sy(ceramics)
>>sy(metals)
>> sy(polymers)
Room T values
Based on data in Table B4,
Callister 6e.
a = annealed
hr = hot rolled
ag = aged
cd = cold drawn
cw = cold worked
qt = quenched & tempered
25
The Strength (stress at break)
• Maximum possible engineering stress in tension.
• 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.
26
TENSILE STRENGTH: COMPARISON
TS(ceram)
~TS(met)
~ TS(comp)
>> TS(poly)
Room T values
Based on data in Table B4,
Callister 6e.
a = annealed
hr = hot rolled
ag = aged
cd = cold drawn
cw = cold worked
qt = quenched & tempered
AFRE, GFRE, & CFRE =
aramid, glass, & carbon
fiber-reinforced epoxy
composites, with 60 vol%
fibers.
28
DUCTILITY, %EL
L f Lo
• Plastic tensile strain at failure: %EL x100
Lo
Ao A f
• Another ductility measure: %AR x100
Ao
• Note: %AR and %EL are often comparable.
--Reason: crystal slip does not change material volume.
--%AR > %EL possible if internal voids form in neck.
29
TOUGHNESS
• Energy to break a unit volume of material
• Approximate by the area under the stress-strain
curve.
Engineering smaller toughness (ceramics)
tensile larger toughness
stress, s (metals, PMCs)
smaller toughness-
unreinforced
polymers
30
Compressive stress
• 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.
stress
Materials where compressive strength is important deformation
• concrete
• bones
• teeth implant 30
Shear 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,
Flexural test
experimental
set-up
32
Impact strength
H0
H1
34
Impact Strength
Small changes in temperature
can have a significant effect on
impact strength
37
Thermal Expansion
Materials change size when temperature
is changed
Tinitial
initial
Tfinal > Tinitial
Tfinal
final
final initial
α (Tfinal Tinitial )
initial
linear coefficient of
thermal expansion (1/K or 1/°C)
37
Thermomechanical analysis (TMA)