Experimental and numerical investigation of deformation and fracture of semicrystalline polymers under varying strain rates and triaxial states of stress
Hfm. El-sayed et al., Experimental and numerical investigation of deformation and fracture of semicrystalline polymers under varying strain rates and triaxial states of stress, PLAS RUB C, 30(2), 2001, pp. 82-87
Tensile tests have been carried out on plain and notched ultra high molecul
ar weight polyethylene and polyoxymethylene specimens over a range of quasi
static strain rates and stress triaxiality conditions. Numerical simulation
s of the experiments have been carried out using the finite element code NI
KE2D in order to give accurate predictions of the triaxial state of stress
at the fracture initiation site as a function of initial geometry and axial
strain. The predicted axial load-time curves obtained from the numerical s
imulations were ill a good agreement with the experimental curves demonstra
ting that the NIKE2D code has the ability to model the deformation behaviou
r of these polymers accurately. The experimental results for plain cylindri
cal specimens show that the materials under investigation are sensitive to
changes in strain rate, with plastic flow stress increasing with increasing
strain rate. The results from the tests on notched specimens show that the
local failure strain decreases with reducing specimen notch profile radii
(i.e. increasing stress triaxiality) but this dependence is less clear for
ultra high molecular weight polyethylene as a result of its much higher duc
tility leading to large axial strains and consequent molecular orientation.