Thermo-mechanically coupled behavior of amorphous polymers below the glass transition temperature

 

ABSTRACT: We have conducted large-strain compression experiments on three representative amorphous polymeric materials: poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), polycarbonate (PC), and a cyclo-olefin polymer (Zeonex-690R), in a temperature range spanning room temperature to slightly below the glass transition temperature of each material, in a strain rate range of 0.0001 /sec to 0.1 /sec, and compressive true strains exceeding 100%.


The constitutive theory is specialized to capture the salient features of the thermo-mechanically coupled strain rate and temperature dependent large deformation mechanical response of amorphous polymers. For the three amorphous polymers studied experimentally, the specialized constitutive model is shown to perform well in reproducing the following major intrinsic features of the macroscopic stress–strain response of these materials: (a) the strain rate and temperature dependent yield strength; (b) the transient yield-peak and strain-softening which occurs due to deformation-induced disordering; (c) the subsequent rapid strain-hardening due to alignment of the polymer chains at large strains; (d) the unloading response at large strains; and (e) the temperature rise due to plastic-dissipation and the limited time for heat-conduction for the compression experiments performed at strain rates 0.01 /sec.


In order to validate the predictive capabilities of our constitutive theory and its numerical implementation, we have performed the following validation experiments: (i) isothermal fixed-end large strain reversed-torsion tests on PC; (ii) macro-scale isothermal plane-strain cold- and hot-forming operations on PC; (iii) macroscale isothermal, axi-symmetric hot-forming operations on Zeonex; (iv) micro-scale hot-embossing of Zeonex; and (v) high-speed normal-impact of a circular plate of PC with a spherical-tipped cylindrical projectile. By comparing the results from this suite of validation experiments of some key macroscopic features, such as the experimentally-measured deformed shapes and the load displacement curves, against corresponding results from numerical simulations, we show that our theory is capable of reasonably accurately reproducing the experimental results obtained in the validation experiments.


Details:

  1. 1)Lallit Anand, Nicoli M. Ames, Vikas Srivastava, and Shawn A. Chester, 2009. A thermo-mechanically coupled theory for large deformations of amorphous polymers. Part I: Formulation. International Journal of Plasticity, 25 111-1113.

  2. 2)Nicoli M. Ames, Vikas Srivastava, Shawn A. Chester, and Lallit Anand, 2009.  A thermo-mechanically coupled theory for large deformations of amorphous polymers. Part II: Applications. International Journal of Plasticity, 25 111-1113.



Simple Tension

In this example we consider simple tension of a PC specimen.  Both the experiment and the simulation are at room temperature and quasi-static rates.



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Fixed End Reversed Torsion

In this example we consider the fixed end reversed torsion of a PC specimen.  Both the experiment and the simulation are at room temperature and quasi-static rates.


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Plane Strain Forging

In this example we consider the plane strain forging of PC.  Both the experiment and the simulation are at 25C or 120C and quasi-static rates.



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Axisymmetric Forging

In this example we consider the axisymmetric forging of Zeonex.  Both the experiment and the simulation are at 90C or 120C and quasi-static rates.


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Impact Loading

In this example we consider the axisymmetric impact of Polycarbonate.  80kg is ``shot’‘ into a PC plate with an initial impact velocity of 3.6m/s.  In this example, the test is neither quasi-static or isothermal.







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