Abstract

PVC plastisol exhibits pseudo-plastic flow in steady shear; that is, viscosity decreases with the increasing shear rate. At higher shear rates viscosity reaches a minimum and then increases, i.e., dilatant behavior. Previously, pseudo-plastic behavior was explained by a mechanism in which the suspended particles partition into an immobilized layer and a mobile phase. The development of the immobilized layer with the increase in shear rate was shown to quantitatively account for pseudo-plastic behavior. In higher shear rates dilatation of the immobilized layer was shown to be the cause of dilatacy. At even higher shear rates the immobilized layer fractures. In this paper the viscosity minimum was interpreted as the yielding of the immobilized layer. Subsequently, data in the literature were analyzed to find criteria for the yielding and fracture of the immobilized layer. Yielding was found to obey Coulomb's criterion, from which the coefficient of friction and the cohesive strength of the immobilized layer were evaluated. These properties were controlled by the nature of particle assembly in the immobilized layer and the plasticizer type had only a minor effect. The value of the coefficient of friction was on the lower side and within the range of values found in the literature for other materials. There were two modes of fracture of the immobilized layer, one with low strength, low strain to break, and the other with high strength, high strain to break. The former is analogous to the brittle fracture of solids and the latter ductile failure. The strength of brittle fracture was somewhat higher than cohesive strength, which was evaluated from yielding data. This is akin to Griffith's criterion for brittle fracture of a solid. Ductile failure occurred when the shear stress exceeded normal stress.

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