Polymer, Vol.54, No.21, 5993-6002, 2013
The response of a glassy polymer in a loading/unloading deformation: The stress memory experiment
A 'stress memory' experiment was designed to expose the nonlinear viscoelastic relaxation processes in a glassy epoxy polymer. The stress memory experiment consists of (i) constant strain rate uniaxial loading to a pre-yield, yield or post-yield condition, (ii) unloading at the same strain rate to zero stress, (iii) holding the strain constant and (iv) monitoring the subsequent stress memory response, where the stress first increases to a maximum and then relaxes to an equilibrium value for that strain. This is an analog to the classic volume memory experiment by Kovacs (Fortschr Hochpolym Forsch, 3, 394, 1964). The stress memory response showed a strong dependence on the loading/unloading strain rate which cannot be predicted by linear viscoelasticity and also provides a significant challenge to a current nonlinear constitutive models. A recently developed Stochastic Constitutive Model (J Rheol, 57(3), 949, 2013) qualitatively predicts the effect of strain rate on the stress memory response. (C) 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.