Abstract

AbstractThe macroscopic stress‐strain behavior of monoclinic polypropylene samples was investigated at 70°C under uniaxial tension and simple shear by means of a special videometric testing system that gives access to the constitutive equation of plastic behavior at constant strain rate up to large deformation. At several levels of plastic strain, the microstructural evolution of the material was characterized by means of X‐ray scattering, densitometry and viscoelastic analysis. It appears that the strain hardening is high in tension, whereas it is nearly zero in shear. This behavior is associated with the development of a fiber texture in tension, which differs drastically from the planar crystalline texture developed in shear. Furthermore, it is shown that structural damage takes place as the plastic deformation proceeds in tension, while only little damage is recorded in shear. A viscoplastic model has been developed that specifically tales into account the various slip systems activated in the polypropylene crystallites and the elastic interactions of the lamellae through a self‐consistent scheme. Simulations based on this model reproduce correctly the contrasting strain‐hardening in tension and in shear and the different crystalline textures induced for these two loading paths.

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