Title: Plastics Testing: Techniques
1Plastics Testing Techniques Instruments for
the Processor
- Dr Bob Jones
- Department of Mechanical Engineering
- University of Texas Pan American
2Overview
- Material Properties Microstructure
- BREAK
- Test Types
- Coupon tests versus product tests
- Sample/Specimen preparation
- Instrument selection for QC labs
3Key Mechanical Properties
- STIFFNESS (modulus) is resistance to deformation
- STRENGTH (yield or flow stress) measures
resistance to permanent deformation - ULTIMATE STRENGTH measures resistance to failure.
- TOUGHNESS is a measure of energy absorbed in
failure or resistance to growth of a crack.
4Stress
- -Intensity of Force
- -Stress force /area
-
5Types of Stress
- Normal load perpendicular to cross-section
6Types of Stress
- Shear load parallel to cross-section
7Strain Intensity of Deformation e dl / lo
8Relating Stress and Strain
S E e Stress Youngs modulus x
strain
9Results of Tensile or Flex Test
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12Viscoelastic Creep
13Microstructure Elements
Molecule Length
Molecule Arrangement
Morphology
Intermolecular Bonds
Fillers Modifiers
14Microstructure Tests
- Measurement/characterization of the condition and
arrangement of molecules and additives within a
plastic system - Process parameters most often affect properties
by altering microstructure
15Molecular Weight
- Average Length of molecules
- Determines processing characteristics and some
mechanical properties - Usually measured by resin manufacturer
16Effect of Molecular Weight on Mechanical
Properties
17Molecular Morphology
Thermoset
Thermoplastic
Network
Amorphous
Crystalline
Cross-link density Network strain Glass
transition temperature
Degree of crystallization Type of crystals
Glass transition Orientation
18Semicrystalline Thermoplastic Microstructure
19Callister, Materials Science Engineering An
introduction, Wiley
20Chains assume folded chain conformation
These collect into lamellar crystallites
Callister, Materials Science and Engineering An
Introduction, Wiley
21Calister, Materials Science and Engineering an
Introduction, Wiley
22- Two crystalline morphologies
- Spherulite
- (no shear)
- Row Nucleated
- (shear)
- Shish-kebab
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24Effects of Crystallization
- Increases
- Modulus (stiffness)
- Strength
- Density
- Chemical Resistance
- Thermal stability
- Hardness
- Decreases
- Toughness
- Permeability
25Thermoset Morphology
Cross-Link Bond
Backbone bond
26Measurement of Network Structure
- Best Indicator of network intensity (crosslink
density, crosslink functionality) is Glass
transition temperature
27Glass Transition Temp.
- Polymer goes from Glassy/Rigid behavior to
rubbery/flexible - Breakdown of Van Der Waals Forces
- Onset of large scale molecular motions
- Important in amorphous polymers not as
significant in crystalline materials.
28Dynamic Mechanical AnalysisModulus Temperature
29Molecular Orientation
- Failure process depends on molecular orientation
- Generally more orientation greater toughness
30Processing Affects Morphology
- Crystallization takes time so cooling rate is
critical - Shear during mold filling or drawing can create
row nucleated structure or orient molecules - Curing rate and temperature determine network
structure in thermosets
31Issues in Filler/Modifier Morphology
- Loading level absolute amount of filler or
modifier - Dispersion or distribution clumping or
orientation of material can dramatically affect
performance - Coupling quality of bonding between polymer and
modifier is critical for optimum performance
32Test Classifications
- Microstructural
- Degree of Cure or Crystallization
- Additive levels, distribution
- Mechanical
- Strength,Toughness, Hardness
- Physical
- Optical properties
- Thermal properties
- Electromagnetic properties
33Coupon vs. Article Testing
- Article Testing
- Result often just a pass/fail
- Test is often awkward or expensive
- Includes effect of processing
- May allow for testing of complex service and
processing interactions - Results are often difficult to relate back to
particular process or material problem ---- not
good for process control
34Coupon vs. Article Testing
- Coupon Testing
- Result is usually a continuous variable
- Doesnt necessarily include all processing
effects - Will generally be directly related to material or
process factor - More useful in process control and product
engineering
35Test Type (Common at UTPA) Coupon
Article
- Tensile
- Flexural
- Compression
- Impact
- DMA
- TMA
- DEA
36Differential Scanning Calorimetry
- Small sample (10 mg)
- Heat flow into sample measured
- Heat capacity measured
- Tg, melting, cure crystallization, decomp,
volatiles
37Thermogravimetric Analysis
- Weight change with temperature
38Dynamic Mechanical Analysis
- Many load configurations
- Oscillating load
- Changing temperature
- Continuous measurement
39DMA Results
- Tg
- Temperature dependence of modulus
- Sensitive to small changes in composition or
morphology
40Thermo-Mechanical Analysis
- Expansion of sample measured
- Temperature varied
- Continuous measurement
41Sample Preparation/Collection
- Avoid conditions which deviate from actual
product conditions - Temperature
- Excess stress or strain application
- Chemical exposure
- For warranty returns, if possible, test failed
components not just samples from same lot
42Minimum Equipment for Plastics QC Lab
- Linear measurement (calipers)
- Analytical balance
- Oven
- Instruments required by customers (colorimeter,
reflectometer, etc)
43Recommended Equipment for QC Lab
- Differential Scanning Calorimeter (DSC) virtual
requirement for thermosetting processors - Durometer or other hardness tester
44Nice to Have in QC Lab
- Small universal testing machine (tensile, flex,
compression testing) - Pendulum impact tester (Izod)
- Melt Indexer (if regrind blending is done or for
acceptance testing of non-certified material)