Author/Authors :
K. B. CARLISLE، نويسنده , , M. KOOPMAN، نويسنده , , K. K. CHAWLA، نويسنده , , R. KULKARNI، نويسنده , , G. M. GLADYSZ، نويسنده , , M. LEWIS، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
Carbon microballoons (CMBs) with tap densities of 0.143, 0.161, and 0.177 g/cm3, as measured
per ASTM B 527-93, were characterized in terms of individual balloon diameter, wall thickness,
and mechanical behavior in compression through a novel uniaxial compression test technique.
This compression test, performed on an MTS Nanoindenter XP II, utilized a flat-ended
cylindrical tip rather than the common Berkovich indenter. Quantitative microscopy techniques
were used to obtain diameter and wall thickness measurements on the polished cross-sections
of individual CMBs that had been cold mounted in epoxy resin. Though there was significant
overlap in the three populations, a trend toward increasing average wall thickness—from 1.32 to
2.16 μm—with increasing tap density was observed. Compressive property data including
failure load, failure strain, fracture energy, and stiffness were obtained for individual
microballoons. Comparison of these data, both inter- and intra-tap density, has yielded some
viable trends. CMB failure strain exhibited a dependence upon the inverse square root of the
CMB diameter, and CMB failure load depended linearly upon CMB stiffness. Averages for each
tap density’s failure load, pseudo-stiffness, and fracture energy were also calculated and
observed to increase with tap density. C 2006 Springer Science + Business Media, Inc.