Abstract

Abstract We propose an efficient simulation-based methodology to characterize the quasi-static (experimental low strain rate) yield stress of an amorphous thermoset polymer, which has generally been considered a limitation of molecular dynamics (MD) simulations owing to the extremely short time steps involved. In an effort to overcome this limitation, the temperature-accelerated method – in which temperature is treated as being equivalent to time in deformation kinetics – is employed to explore the experimental strain rate conditions. The mechanical tensile behavior of a highly crosslinked polymer is then investigated with MD simulations by considering different strain rates and temperatures below the glass transition temperature. The derived yield stress represents the time- and temperature-dependent characteristics, showing that the yield stress decreases with increasing temperature and decreasing strain rate. Changeable vertical and horizontal shift factors are introduced for the first time to reflect nonlinear characteristics of the yield stress across a broad range of strain rates and to quantify the correlation between increasing temperatures and decreasing strain rates. With the proposed method, the Eyring plot, which describes the rate effect on yield from quasi-static to high-rate conditions, is predicted from MD simulations, and agrees well with macroscopic experimental results. From the constructed Eyring plot, the experimentally validated quasi-static stress-strain response is also estimated by using linear elastic model and Ludwick's hardening model. The proposed method provides new avenues for the design of glassy polymers using only fully atomistic MD simulations, thus overcoming the existing temporal scale limitations.

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