Abstract

AbstractThis study was undertaken to determine how milled glass fibers affect the fatigue resistance of reaction injection molded (RIM) nylon 6. Specifically the effects of glass content, fiber length, orientation, and surface treatment were investigated. The fatigue crack growth rates for unfilled and glass‐filled samples were observed to follow the well‐known Paris equation in terms of dependence on cyclic stress intensity factor. For the unfilled nylon a line shaped zone was observed in advance of the crack tip. Fractography results suggest that the zone was the projection of the actual crack tip profile through the thickness of the sample rather than a distinct plastic or deformation zone. The fatigue fracture surface exhibited a patchy type structure with features 50–150 μm in size, suggesting a void coalescence type of mechanism as has been reported for injection molded nylons. A diffuse damage zone, several millimeters in size, was observed at the crack tip for the glass‐filled RIM nylon 6. The zone was observed to pulsate with the applied oscillating load. The growth of the damage zone volume with increasing crack length (and thus increasing stress intensity factor range) followed the Paris law, as did the crack growth rate data. The damage mechanism is attributed to void formation and microcracking at the fiber–matrix interface. The results of this study show that, for milled glass‐reinforced RIM nylon 6, the crack growth rates were much more rapid than observed for injection‐molded nylon 6 containing chopped glass fibers. This difference is attributed to the greatly reduced glass fiber lengths for the milled glasses.

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