Abstract

Abstract Polymeric substances have seen an unprecedented integration in countless applications and fields of life, subjecting them to a broad range of environmental conditions, which can cause a form of damage to the structural and mechanical properties of these components known as aging. In this study we investigate the effects of the degradation of polymeric materials due to the extended exposure to sunlight, which can be simulated through controlled photo-oxidative aging using ultraviolet (UV) radiation as the main catalyst of this phenomenon. The effects on mechanical behavior and chemical properties of four polymeric materials with different mechanical characteristics was accordingly monitored throughout the study. The materials range in hardness with the polyurethane adhesive being the hardest and acting plastically, followed by an acrylic which exhibits greater hardening with time, a polyurethane sealant, which behaves in an elastomeric manner, and a silicon sealant, which is the softest of the set. Samples were prepared and subjected to UV radiation at three different temperatures namely 45, 60 and 80°C, for different aging periods ranging from 1 day for higher temperatures to 150 days for lower ones. The samples were then subjected to the Fourier transform Infrared spectroscopy (FTIR) test to monitor the change in the chemical composition of the materials along the aging durations and conditions. The materials were then subjected to mechanical testing along two modes of mechanical loading, which are a simple tension until failure and a double-cyclic test with progressively increasing strain limits after every two successful cycles until the sample reaches failure. The samples are loaded at constant strain rates throughout both tests. These tests revealed the change of behavior of our materials along the aging periods and conditions. The changes in mechanical behavior vary across each individual material depending on the aging temperature and period, with the changes ranging from hardening to softening, embrittlement or an increase in the maximum strain the material can endure before failure. A general trend would be that most materials become harder after photo-oxidation, however due to the range of temperatures in the aging conditions, thermo-oxidation, which causes softening in some of the polymers, has an increasingly notable effect at higher temperatures. A visible correlation can be noted between the change in mechanical behavior and a change in absorbance of Infrared Radiation (IR) in the FTIR spectrum, as the greater the crosslinking throughout the polymer matrix, the lower the absorbance of IR radiation due to the increased stiffness of the overall macro-molecular structure.

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