Characterization of Thermo-Mechanical and Fracture Behaviors of Thermoplastic Polymers

Materials (Basel). 2014 Jan 13;7(1):375-398. doi: 10.3390/ma7010375.

Abstract

In this paper the effects of the strain rate on the inelastic behavior and the self-heating under load conditions are presented for polymeric materials, such as polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA), polycarbonate (PC), and polyamide (PA66). By a torsion test, it was established that the shear yield stress behavior of PMMA, PC, and PA66 is well-described by the Ree-Eyring theory in the range of the considered strain rates. During the investigation, the surface temperature was monitored using an infrared camera. The heat release appeared at the early stage of the deformation and increased with the strain and strain rate. This suggested that the external work of deformation was dissipated into heat so the torsion tests could not be considered isothermal. Eventually, the effect of the strain rate on the failure modes was analyzed by scanning electron microscopy.

Keywords: infrared camera; polymeric materials; self-heating; thermo-mechanical behavior; torsion test.