Abstract

Mechanical properties of fiber-reinforced polymers are sensitive to environmental influences due to the presence of the polymer matrix but inhomogeneous and anisotropic due to the presence of the fibers. Hence, structural analysis with mechanical properties as a function of loading, environment, design, and material condition produces more precise, reliable, and economic structures. In the present study, an analytical model is developed that can predict engineering values as well as non-linear stress–strain curves as a function of six independent parameters for short fiber-reinforced polymers manufactured by injection molding. These parameters are the strain, temperature, humidity, fiber content, fiber orientation, and thickness of the specimen. A three-point test matrix for each independent parameter is used to obtain experimental data. To insert the effect of in-homogenous and anisotropic distribution of fibers in the analytical model, microCT analysis is done. Similarly, dynamic mechanical thermal analysis (DMTA) is done to insert the viscoelastic effect of the material. The least mean square regression method is used to predict empirical formulas. The standard error of regression for the fitting of the model with experimental stress–strain curves is closely controlled below 2% of the stress range. This study provides user-specific material data for simulations with specific material, loading, and environmental conditions.

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