Journal of Materials Science, Vol.30, No.14, 3658-3661, 1995
Temperature and Strain-Rate Dependence of Fracture-Toughness of Phenolphthalein Polyether Ketone
A strong strain-rate and temperature dependence was observed for the fracture toughness of phenolphthalein polyether ketone (PEK-C). Two separate crack-blunting mechanisms have been proposed to account for the fracture-toughness data. The first mechanism involves thermal blunting due to adiabatic heating at the crack tip for the high temperatures studied. In the high-temperature range, thermal blunting increases the fracture toughness corresponding to an effectively higher test temperature. However, in the low-temperature range, the adiabatic temperature rise is insufficient to cause softening and Jic increases with increasing temperature owing to viscoelastic losses associated with the p-relaxation there. The second mechanism involves plastic blunting due to shear yield/flow processes at the crack tip and this takes place at slow strain testing of the single-edge notched bending (SENB) samples. The temperature and strain-rate dependence of the plastic zone size may also be responsible for the temperature and strain-rate dependence of fracture toughness.
Keywords:CRACK-BLUNTING MECHANISMS;RUBBER-TOUGHENED EPOXY;POLY(METHYL METHACRYLATE);PLASTIC-DEFORMATION;POLYMERS;RESINS;PROPAGATION;BEHAVIOR;PMMA