Role of Glass Transition Temperature on Energy Absorption Mechanisms in High Strain Rate Impact Performance of Fiber Reinforced Composites

Author(s):  
Brendan A. Patterson ◽  
Casey Busch ◽  
Kevin A. Masser ◽  
Daniel B. Knorr

The high strain rate response of polycarbonate (PC) and polymethyl methacrylate (PMMA) are measured using a split Hopkinson torsion bar for shear strain rates Ẏ from 500 s -1 to 2200 s -1 , and temperatures in the range —100°C to 200°C. The yield and fracture behaviours are compared with previous data and existing theories for Ẏ < I s -1 . We find that PC yields in accordance with the Eyring theory of viscous flow, for temperatures between the beta transition temperature T β ≈ — 100°C and the glass transition temperature T g = 147°C. At lower temperatures, T < T β , backbone chain motion becomes frozen and the shear yield stress is greater than the Eyring prediction. Strain softening is an essential feature of yield of PC at all strain rates employed. Poly methyl methacrylate fractures before yield in the high strain rate tests for T < 80°C, which is close to the glass transition temperature T g 120°C. It is found that the fracture stress for both materials obeys a thermal activation rate theory of Eyring type. Fracture is thought to be nucleation controlled, and is due to the initiation and break down of a craze at the fracture stress τ f . Examination of the fracture surfaces reveals that failure is by the nucleation and propagation of inclined mode I microcracks which link to form a stepped fracture surface. This reveals that failure is by tensile cracking and not by a thermal instability in the material. The process of shear localization is fundamentally different from that shown by steel and titanium alloys.


Author(s):  
Takahisa Omata ◽  
Aman Sharma ◽  
Takuya Kinoshita ◽  
Issei Suzuki ◽  
Tomohiro Ishiyama ◽  
...  

In this study, the effect of GeO2 on the thermal stability and proton mobility (μH) of proton-conducting phosphate glasses was experimentally investigated using 22HO1/2−3NaO1/2−(12−x)LaO3/2−xGeO2−63PO5/2 glasses. Increasing glass transition temperature (Tg)...


2017 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 36002 ◽  
Author(s):  
A.G. Akulichev ◽  
A. Tiwari ◽  
L. Dorogin ◽  
A. T. Echtermeyer ◽  
B. N. J. Persson

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