Abstract

This work addresses the general issue of the mechanical behavior of the confined amorphous phase in rubbery semicrystalline polymers. Even far above the glassy transition temperature, the amorphous phase in semicrystalline polymers is known to remain constrained by crystals and is less mobile than a purely amorphous polymer close to its equilibrium rubbery state. The aim of this paper, based on Polyamide 11, is to investigate the existence and significance of a relaxed state in the amorphous phase of a semicrystalline polymer far above T g. A strain-rate independent tensile curve (called the “asymptotic curve”) is evidenced below a critical strainrate, consistently with a fully relaxed state of the rubbery amorphous phase. Nevertheless, a contradictory mechanical phenomenology was observed at the same time (hysteretic unloading, relaxation, and creep involving the same strain-rates as the “asymptotic” loading regime), suggesting joint amorphous and crystalline processes. Modeling of this paradoxical behavior is attempted, based on the experimental results. The first one-dimensional simulations are presented.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call