Title of article :
Effect of an environmental stress cracking agent
on the mechanism of fatigue and creep in polyethylene
Author/Authors :
R. Ayyer، نويسنده , , A. Hiltner، نويسنده , , E. Baer، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
دوهفته نامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
It is of interest to determine whether the prediction
of long-term creep failure from short-term fatigue
experiments, as established for polyethylene in air, can be
extended to environmental liquids. This article was undertaken
to characterize the mechanism of creep crack growth
in an environmental liquid at 50 C and to determine
whether the mechanism was conserved in fatigue as
required for the fatigue-to-creep correlation. For this purpose,
creep and fatigue tests at R-ratio (the ratio of
minimum to maximum load in the fatigue cycle) of 1.0
(creep) and 0.1 were performed in air, water, and aqueous
Igepal CO-630 (Igepal-630) solutions at various concentrations.
It was found that fatigue and creep followed the
same stepwise crack growth mechanism as in air in all the
Igepal-630 concentrations studied. In air and water, fatigue
substantially accelerated the crack growth kinetics compared
to creep. A fatigue acceleration effect was also seen
with the lower Igepal-630 concentrations. However, the
acceleration effect lessened as the concentration increased
to 0.05 vol.% due to the combined effects of the gradually
decreasing creep lifetime and the gradually increasing
fatigue lifetime. Above 0.05%, the lifetimes in creep and
fatigue decreased in parallel with the fatigue lifetime only
slightly lower than the creep lifetime. It appeared that Igepal-
630 reduced the frictional resistance to chain slippage
to the extent that any significant strain rate sensitivity was
lost. Increasing the molecular weight had the equivalent
effect of decreasing the Igepal-630 concentration. This was
probably a kinetic effect related to the diffusion of the stress
cracking liquid
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science
Journal title :
Journal of Materials Science