The fracture toughness of a polycarbonate/poly(butylene terephthalate) (PC/PBT) blend was determined using three different J-integral methods, ASTM E813-81, E813-87, and hysteresis energy. The critical J values (J1,) obtained are largely independent of the crosshead speed (range from 0.5 to 50 mm/mi
Fracture toughness and fracture mechanisms of PBT/PC/IM blend
โ Scribed by Jingshen Wu; Yin -Wing Mai; Brian Cotterell
- Publisher
- Springer
- Year
- 1993
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 1018 KB
- Volume
- 28
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0022-2461
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โฆ Synopsis
The static and impact fracture toughnesses of a polybutylene terephthalate/polycarbonate/impact modifier (PBT/PC/IM) blend were studied at different temperatures. The static fracture toughness of the blend was evaluated via the specific fracture work concept and the J-integral analysis. A comparison of these two analytical methods showed that the specific essential fracture work, We, was equivalent to the J~c_81 obtained by the ASTM E81 3-81 procedure, representing the crack initiation resistance of the material. The discrepancy between We and J~c_89 of ASTM E813-89 was caused by the extra energy component in J=c_8~ consumed by a 0.2 mm crack growth. Impact fracture toughness was also analysed using the specific essential fracture work approach. When the fracture was elastic, We was equivalent to the critical potential energy release rate, G~c, obtained via LEFM analysis. Temperature and strain-rate effects on the fracture toughness were also studied. The increase in impact toughness with temperature was attributed to two different toughening mechanisms, namely, the relaxation processes of the rubbery particles and the parent polymers in a relatively low-temperature range and thermal blunting of the crack tip at higher temperatures. The enhancement in static fracture toughness at temperatures below -60 ~ was thought to be caused by plastic crack-tip blunting, but the monotonic reduction in yield stress was largely responsible for the toughness decreasing with higher temperatures. The temperaturedependent fracture toughness data obtained in static tests could be horizontally shifted to match roughly the data for the impact tests, indicating the existence of a time-temperature equivalence relationship.
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Mode II fracture behavior of poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT)-modified epoxy systems are studied. Two different types of testing for mode II fracture are conducted. One was to investigate the fracture behavior of bulk epoxy systems, in comparison with mode I fracture, using single-edge notched spe