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08 Viscoelasticity

The document discusses the principles of viscoelasticity, including basic concepts such as creep, stress relaxation, and dynamic straining. It outlines various models like the Kelvin-Voigt and Maxwell models, emphasizing the relationships between stress, strain, and time-dependent behavior in materials. Additionally, it covers the effects of temperature on viscoelastic properties and introduces the phenomenological theory of linear viscoelasticity, including relaxation and creep tests.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
2 views

08 Viscoelasticity

The document discusses the principles of viscoelasticity, including basic concepts such as creep, stress relaxation, and dynamic straining. It outlines various models like the Kelvin-Voigt and Maxwell models, emphasizing the relationships between stress, strain, and time-dependent behavior in materials. Additionally, it covers the effects of temperature on viscoelastic properties and introduces the phenomenological theory of linear viscoelasticity, including relaxation and creep tests.

Uploaded by

fadi kimya
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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8 VISCOELASTICITY

Basic impulses and responses

creep impulse response stress relaxation


impulse

=G
elastic

(time)
response
viscous elastic viscous
 =   

liquid

viscoelastic viscoelastic

solid solid liquid


8.1 Two parameter models

isotropic body
ideal elastic element (spring) =G

ideal viscous element (dashpot)  =   

8.1.2 Kelvin (Voight)

retarded elasticity
 transition to equilibrium deformed state retarded by viscous resistance

spring = dashpot = 
 spring +  dashpot = 

d
G   
dt
Creep  = f (t) G  
d

(t  0)  = 0 ;  = 0 dt

introduce  = /G [s]


d
G   0  G
dt
 t
d
 
dt

0 
0 G 0

 0   t

 1  e  
G  
 

0
  deformation at equilibrium
G

 retardation time  viscosity


 stiffness of the spring
Reverse creep, Recovery (t  0)  = 0 ;  (0) =  d
G   
dt
t

   e 

Stress relaxation  = 0 (t  0) =0


 = 0 (t  0)   = f (t)

– step change of  at t = 0 – d/dt   –   

– when deformed  = 0 (= const.) – (t) = G0 (= const.)


no stress relaxation
Temperature dependence

G – only small effect, G  const.


 – decreases with T (WLF eq.)   – decreases with T (WLF eq.)
Dynamic straining (periodically changing)

 = 0 sint 0 – amplitude
Tc – time of a cycle, period
 – angular frequency (= 2f)
f – frequency (= 1/Tc)

spring  = G  = G0 sint


G0 = 0 – amplitude

response in phase with impuls

viscous element
d
  = 0  cost = 0 sin(t+/2)
dt

0 = 0 – amplitude

stress is ahead by /2 or deformation is lag behind by /2


viscoelastic materials – deformation is lag behind by angle 

lag angle 0    /2

deformation

stress response

in phase
stress components

out of phase
8.1.2 Maxwell

stress relaxation  spring = dashpot = 


 flow complicated with elasticity spring + dashpot = 

1 d  d
 
G dt  dt

Creep  = f (t) (t  0)  = 0 ;  = 0

d
0 0
dt   0  t
 t
0 
 d  
0 0

dt

(back creep, recovery): at t = t1 :  = 0

elastic recovery (reversible deformation) r = 0 = spring = 0/G


0
set (ireversible deformation) ir = dashpot = t
 1
1 d  d
Stress relaxation  = 0 (t  0)  = 0  
G dt  dt
 = 0 (t  0)   = f (t)
d/dt = 0

 relaxation time
1 d 
 0
G dt G

 t
d dt
 
 

0 0

t

   0e 
8.2 Multi parameter models

8.2.1 Tucket
deformation of chem. bonds and
linear amorphous polymer intermolecular distances

deformation of polymer coils

Stress relaxation displacement of macromolecules


glass → irreversible, flow

rubber liquid

Creep
flow

glass rubber
8.2.2 Generalised Maxwell

real polymers →more i  wider transition region

G1 G2 G3 Gn

Relaxation modulus G(t) [= (t)/0] of generalised Maxwell model


j
G (t )  Ge   Gi e  t /  i the dependence of Gi on i is called relaxation spectrum
i 1

Relaxation modulus with continuous spectrum g():



G (t )  Ge   g ( )e  t /  d
0

instantaneous elastic response + delayed elastic r. + flow


(non relaxing) (relaxing)

– similarly generalized Kelvin for creep (retardation spectrum)


8.3 Introduction to fenomenological theory of linear viscoelasticity

linear viscoelasticity = direct proportionality between stress and deformation (response always at same time
after impulse – isochronical response)

(t) = G(t) 0

linear

nonlinear

linearity limits (stress 10 MPa)


plastics ca 1 %
rubbers 10 – 100 %
8.3.1 Viscoelastic functions

relaxation test
  (t ) 
G(t) – (time dependant) shear relaxation modulus of elasticity   
  0 
G(ti) = (ti)/0 – isochronical (ti) relaxation shear modulus of elasticity

creep test
  (t ) 
J(t) – (time dependant) creep compliance   
 0 

dynamic test
  
Gd – shear dynamic modulus of elasticity   0 
 0 
= complex modulus of elasticity G* = Gd (cos + i sin) = G + i G
  0 
G – storage modulus of elasticity (real component)   
 0 
  0 
G – loss modulus of elasticity (imaginary component)  
 
 0
also J and 
8.3.2 Boltzmann superposition principle

total response of many impulses is equal to sum of responses of individual impulses


t

example: (Maxwell) G  G0e 

two impulses: at time u1 :  =  (u1)


u2 :  =  (u2)
t

response: t  u1 1(t) = G(t – u1) (u1) = G0e    (u1 )
t

t  u2 2(t) = G(t – u2) (u2) = G0 e    (u 2 )

G(t) = 1(t) + 2(t)

d (u )
differential increments of deformation d = du
du
d (u )
corresponding responses d = G(t – u) d = G(t – u) du
du

d (u)
t
total stress response on deformation (u):  (t )   G(t  u) du
0
d u
Relationship between relaxation and dynamic behaviour
model B
relaxation behaviour G1
G(t )  G1et /   G2 G2

when t0 G(0) = G1 + G2


t G() = G2 () = 0 G2

dynamic behaviour deformation (u) = 0 sin u


t t t
d (u )
 (t )   G (t  u )du   G1 0 cos u  e (t u ) / du   G2 0 cos u  du
0
du 0 0

 (t )   2 2 
 sin t  G1  cos t  G1et /  
G(t) =  G1  G
0  1   2 2 2  1   2 2 1   2 2
 
at steady state:
 G´
G   G1  G2
1 
2 2


G   G1
1   2 2

( K  1)
tg  G1
1  K 2 2

where – transition intensity

G(0) Gd (  ) G1  G2
K  
G() Gd (  0) G2
8.3.3 Mechanical energy absorption
(and its conversion to heat)

absorbed energy w [J m-3]

energy absorbed during one period (Tc) : w – stored (elastic) energy (= 0)


w – lost (viscous) energy

Tc = 2/ w  G 02

1
heat flux Hd = w(Tc ) / Tc  G 0
2
2
8.4 Relaxation transitions in amorphous polymers
8.4.1 Secondary transition

transition between two elastic states at glassy region

example:

PMMA at 25 °C – transition intensity


relatively small (K = 1,5)
– rotation in (side) ester group

polycyclohexyl methacrylate (PCMA) at – 42 °C


– conformation transitions of cyclohexyl ring (chair  boat)

positive effect on mech. properties


– dian polycarbonate
8.4.2 Main transition

transition glass–rubber
large transition intensity – typically K = 1500
wide transition region (6 to 7 decimal orders)  a number of relaxation mechanism – wide spectrum
of relaxation times
loss factor maximum at lower frequency (e.g. 100times for NR) than corresponds to G´´ maximum

temperature ↑  frequency dependence shifted to higher frequencies


(the same curve shape, shift to the right in log-log scale)
 simple thermo rheological behaviour, WLF eq. can be used

Example:

vulcanised NR
8.4.3 Rubber – melt transition

Creep, e.g. PMMA při 110 °C :


compliance slightly  entanglements (physical network)
time  106 s – slope dlogJ(t)/dlogt increases to 1  entanglements relax, physical network tears 
irreversible deformation (flow)
 t t
compliance J    
0  J (t )

part of irreversible deformation (%)

irreversible irreversible compliance Jir(t) = t/


deformation

reversible reversible compliance Jr(t) = J(t)  t/


def.

region
rubber flow
The effect of MW on width of rubbery region and the position of flow region

Polystyrene
curve M [kg mol-1]
1 8.9
2 59
3 113
4 275
5 580

rubber region
- missing at low M
- widening with M
PS  proportional to M 3.5 (M  40 kg/mol)
M (M  40 kg/mol)

critical mol. weight (Mcr), above that the dependence on M more steep
(„gel point“ of physical network)

M  Mcr log  = log cr  log (Mcr / M)

M  Mcr log  = log cr + log (M / Mcr)3,5


8.4.4 Time-temperature superposition

Superposition :

1. Reference temperature T0, e.g. 110 °C.

2. Log-log dependence at T0 is left in the place and


dependences at other temps. are shifted to
merge (super positioning)  one curve, so-
called generalised dependence of relaxation
modulus on time, which is valid for T0.
The shift log aT for every temperature differences T –T0 (temp. T) can be plotted

log aT = log t – log t0

aT = t/t0

1/t, 1/t0 measures of relaxation rates


1/aT – relative relaxation at T
(related to T0)

model B: t/ = t0/0 = const.  aT = T/To

(thermo rheologically simple polymer)

The temperature dependence of aT  WLF above Tg


8.4 Molecular theories

- Kelvin model
isolated chain → entropic spring, F1 = 2ktb2 r = k1 r
in zero viscosity environment → statistical theory of entropic elasticity
dr
in non-zero viscosity environment → F2 = k2
dt
F1 + F2 = F
dr
k1r  k2 F chain
dt
d
G    Kelvin
dt
- flexible chain models  the simplest model by Raus:

conception:
 polymer chain divided into submolecules,
 beads connected with springs
springs: freely jointed chains the same in length
 only beads interact with viscous environment

Solution: generalised Maxwell model with m members


m  1 
relaxation modulus G(t) = NkT   
exp 

p 1  p 
if m  1 p = 1 / p2 , p = 1, 2, ... , m

k f ,s Z 2 a 2
1 = – end relaxation time
6 2 p 2 kT

– proportional to M 2 (no entanglements)


M 4,5 (entanglements)
– significantly depends on temperature (all members)
 simple thermo rheological behaviour
 verification of time – temperature equivalence superposition

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