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Mechanical Properties of Polymers

The document discusses the mechanical properties of polymers, which describe a polymer's behavior under stress. It defines key mechanical properties including tensile strength, the stress needed to break a sample; elongation-to-break, the strain on a sample when it breaks; Young's modulus, the ratio of stress to strain or slope of the stress-strain curve; and toughness, a measure of the energy absorbed before breaking. It provides examples of typical mechanical property values for various materials.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
253 views4 pages

Mechanical Properties of Polymers

The document discusses the mechanical properties of polymers, which describe a polymer's behavior under stress. It defines key mechanical properties including tensile strength, the stress needed to break a sample; elongation-to-break, the strain on a sample when it breaks; Young's modulus, the ratio of stress to strain or slope of the stress-strain curve; and toughness, a measure of the energy absorbed before breaking. It provides examples of typical mechanical property values for various materials.
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Mechanical Properties

http://faculty.uscupstate.edu/llever/Polymer Resources/Mechanical.htm

Polymer Chemistry
Mechanical Properties

The mechanical properties of a polymer involve its behavior under stress. These properties tell a polymer scientist or engineer many of the things he or she needs to know when considering how a polymer can be used43. How strong is the polymer? How much can you stretch it before it breaks? How stiff is it? How much does it bend when you push on it? Is it brittle? Does it break easily if you hit it hard? Is it hard or soft? Does it hold up well under repeated stress? The mechanical properties of polymers are one of the features that distinguishes them from small molecules32.

Stress-Strain Curves Tensile Strength % Elongation-to-Break Young's Modulus Toughness Typical Materials Return to Polymer Main Menu

Tensile Strength The tensile strength is the stress needed to break a sample45. It is expressed in Pascals or psi (pounds per square inch). 1 MPa = 145 psi The tensile strength is an important property for polymers that are going to be stretched. Fibers, for instance, must have good tensile strength46. Return to Top

% Elongation to Break

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Mechanical Properties

http://faculty.uscupstate.edu/llever/Polymer Resources/Mechanical.htm

The elongation-to-break is the strain on a sample when it breaks. This usually is expressed as a percent. The elongation-to-break sometimes is called the ultimate elongation46. Fibers have a low elongation-to-break and elastomers have a high elongation-to-break47.

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Young's Modulus Young's modulus is the ratio of stress to strain. It also is called the modulus of elasticity or the tensile modulus48. Young's modulus is the slope of a stressstrain curve. Stress-strain curves often are not straight-line plots, indicating that the modulus is changing with the amount of strain. In this case the initial slope usually is used as the modulus, as is illustrated in the diagram at the right. Rigid materials, such as metals, have a high Young's modulus. In general, fibers have high Young's modulus values, elastomers have low values, and plastics lie somewhere in between46. Return to Top

Toughness

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Mechanical Properties

http://faculty.uscupstate.edu/llever/Polymer Resources/Mechanical.htm

The toughness of a material is the area under a stress-strain curve. The stress is proportional to the tensile force on the material and the strain is proportional to its length. The area under the curve then is proportional to the integral of the force over the distance the polymer stretches before breaking.

This integral is the work (energy) required to break the sample. The toughness is a measure of the energy a sample can absorb before it breaks.

There is a difference between toughness and strength, as is illustrated in the three plots at the right46. A material that is strong but not tough is said to be brittle. Brittle substances are strong, but cannot deform very much. Polystyrene (PS) is brittle, for example. High impact polystyrene (HIPS), a blend of polystyrene and polybutadiene (a rubbery polymer above its glass transition temperature) is said to be rubber-toughened.

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Typical Materials - Mechanical Properties Material Tensile Strength (MPa) % Elongation-to-Break Young's Modulus (GPa)

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Mechanical Properties

http://faculty.uscupstate.edu/llever/Polymer Resources/Mechanical.htm

Stainless Steel Balls50 Cellophane Film51 Nitrile Rubber Sheet51 Fiberglass Yarn52 Nylon53

2,000 50 - 120 20 - 30 1400 - 2000 50

Very small 10 - 50 250 - 500 3-4 150 Return to Top

200 3 Very low 72 2

Return to Main Polymer Menu Partial support for this work was provided by the National Science Foundation's Division of Undergraduate Education through grants DUE #9950809 and DUE #9950296. Additional support was provided by the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation. PCOL faculty also acknowledge the National Science Teachers Association which awarded the PCOL Faculty Consortium the 1998 Gustav Ohaus Award for Innovation in College Science Teaching. Links: Main Menu Composition Transitions Molec. Weight Topology Isomerism Mechanical Experimental References Morphology

This page was last updated on July 21, 2000 [email protected]

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