Yield and transient effects during the plastic deformation of solid polymers |
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Authors: | G'Sell C. Jonas J. J. |
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Affiliation: | (1) Laboratoire de Physique du Solide (LA au CNRS no. 155), Ensmim, Parc de Saurupt, 54042 Nancy, France;(2) Department of Mining and Metallurgical Engineering, McGill University, 3450 University Street, H3A 2A7 Montreal, Canada |
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Abstract: | Tensile tests were performed on seven commercial polymers at 22° C and at constant true strain rates of 10–4 to 10–1 sec–1. The constant strain rates were imposed on the minimum section of each sample with the aid of a diametral transducer, an exponential function generator and a closed-loop hydraulic testing machine. The polymers investigated were: high and low density polyethylene, polytetrafluoroethylene, polypropylene. polyvinylchloride and polyamide 6 and 66. True yield drops were observed in the rigid glassy polymers, whereas yielding was more gradual in the semi-crystalline or plasticized polymers. Strain rate change tests were also performed, during which one order of magnitude increases and decreases were imposed on the specimens. Normal transients were observed at small strains in the samples containing a rubbery phase, while the transients were of an inverse nature in the samples containing a glassy phase. With an increase in the strain at which the change was initiated, the normal transients changed in character to inverse. Transient tests were also performed in which straining was interrupted to permit a period of stress relaxation or of holding in the unloaded condition prior to the resumption of straining. A quantitative model is proposed, based on the dynamics of plastic waves which accounts for the transition from normal to inverse transient behaviour with increasing strain, and also explains the opposite effects of stress relaxation and of specimen unloading on the restraining transients. |
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