Abstract

We studied how the preliminary orientation of an amorphous glassy PET via its uniaxial tensile drawing above the glass transition temperature affects the deformation behavior during subsequent tensile drawing in the presence of adsorptionally active environments. The tensile drawing of the preoriented PET samples with a low degree of preliminary orientation (below 100%) in the presence of liquid environments proceeds via the mechanism of solvent crazing; however, when a certain critical tensile strain is achieved (150% for PET), the ability of oriented samples to experience crazing appears to be totally suppressed. When the tensile drawing of preoriented samples is performed at a constant strain rate, the craze density in the sample increases with increasing degree of preliminary orientation; however when the test samples are stretched under creep conditions, the craze density markedly decreases. This behavior can be explained by a partial healing and smoothening of surface defects during preliminary orientation and by the effect of entanglement network. The preliminary orientation of polymers provides an efficient means for control over the craze density and the volume fraction of fibrillar polymer material in crazes.

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