Micromechanical modeling of large plastic deformation and texture evolution in semi-crystalline polymers (Q1310336): Difference between revisions
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Revision as of 11:10, 22 May 2024
scientific article
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English | Micromechanical modeling of large plastic deformation and texture evolution in semi-crystalline polymers |
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Micromechanical modeling of large plastic deformation and texture evolution in semi-crystalline polymers (English)
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13 March 1994
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A micromechanically-based composite model is proposed to study large plastic deformation and texture evolution in semi-crystalline polymers. The microstructure of many semi-crystalline polymers consists of co- existing crystalline and amorphous phases locally associated with each other in a fine plate-like morphological structure. An aggregate of two- phase composite inclusions is used to model these materials. A Sachs-like model and two newly-developed self-consistent-like hybrid models are proposed to relate volume-average deformation and stress within the two- phase composite inclusion to the remote (macroscopic) fields. Applications of these composite models are made to predict stress-strain behavior and texture evolution in initially isotropic high density polyethylene under different modes of straining.
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back stress tensor
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co-existing crystalline and amorphous phases
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two- phase composite inclusions
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Sachs-like model
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hybrid models
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high density polyethylene
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