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Practical Considerations In Determining Material Properties
Susan I. Hill Structures and Materials Evaluation Laboratory University of Dayton Research Institute (937) Future of Modeling in Composites Molding Processes Workshop June 9-10, 2004
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Defining Needs Depends on application and model
Impact can be compressive event but material failure is tensile event Localized delaminations, cracking, interfacial bonding in composites Necessary test data are defined by selected model Tensile, compression, and shear data Energy absorption Temperature effect Strain rate effect Failure
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Types of tests required
May need to go beyond the typical tensile strength, modulus, failure strength data, e.g. Uniaxial compression Confined compression (bulk modulus) Cyclic tension Stress relaxation Resonant Beam ?
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Impact-related models
Material models exist for structural polymers Lacking for composites FE codes may not incorporate correct material models Current models have poor handling of viscoelastic effects, plastic flow, strain rate effects, and fracture Use of quasi-static data will underestimate material response at higher impact rates
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Polyolefin
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Polyolefin relationship with strain rate
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Polycarbonate
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Relationship with Strain Rate
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Highly glass-filled polymer
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Background information
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Defining Needs Strain rate defines test method
Quasi-static -- Screw-type test machines to 0.1/s Intermediate (“High”) -- Servo-hydraulic test machines 0.1 to /s Bar Impact -- Split Hopkinson Bar 200 to 10,000/s
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Types of high rate problems
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Comparison of tensile specimens used for quasi-static and dynamic tests
ASTM D638 Type I ASTM D638 Type V Dimensions in mm.
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