Abstract

AbstractThe tensile stress‐strain behavior of glass fiber‐reinforced polyacetal resin was investigated for various fiber concentrations, fiber length distributions, and finishing agents. The polyacetal fiber blends change considerably in strength and elongation at break when treated with ammonium chloride, but otherwise similar specimens still follow a common stress‐strain curve to a point shortly before failure. As the mean fiber length decreases, the modulus and tensile strength fall, but the elongation at break remains almost unchanged. The observed tensile behavior is discussed in terms of a simplified model, which assigns the fibers to two categories: a fraction α parallel to the applied load, and the remainder distributed in a plane perpendicular to the load axis. By fitting this model to the stress‐strain curves, two other constants of each system are derived: a length‐dependent efficiency factor β for parallel fibers, whose magnitude agrees with the predictions of Rosen and his co‐workers, and a factor γ which expresses the constraint of the matrix resin by the “transverse” fibers. The behavior of γ is consistent with Tsai's theory of the transverse modulus of laminates, if a reasonable amount of fiber–fiber contact is assumed. In terms of this model, possible interpretations of the behavior under repeated loading and the mechanism of tensile failure are presented.

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