On the role of the spherulitic microstructure in fatigue damage of pure polymer and glass-fiber reinforced semi-crystalline polyamide 6.6
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
International Journal of Fatigue. 2019, vol. 126, p. 44-54
Elsevier
English Abstract
Understanding fatigue damage mechanisms in short fiber reinforced thermoplastics is a key issue in order to optimize material processing and propose physically based multiscale fatigue damage models. The present work aims ...Read more >
Understanding fatigue damage mechanisms in short fiber reinforced thermoplastics is a key issue in order to optimize material processing and propose physically based multiscale fatigue damage models. The present work aims at further understanding observations of fatigue damage in the polyamide 6.6 matrix with respect to its semi-crystalline structure. In this paper the polymer and associated composite are tested in their ductile regime i.e. above the glass transition temperature. Tomographic and SEM observations are used in order to establish a damage scenario at the spherulitic scale. These observations prove that fatigue damage progresses by intra-spherulitic failure in their equatorial plane. Observations of the spherulite nuclei also evidence the oriented structure of the semi-crystalline polymer induced by the injection-molding manufacturing process.Read less <
English Keywords
Oriented spherulites
Semi-crystalline polymer
Fatigue damage
Composite material
Origin
Hal imported