Ricardo Simoes (a,b), Anonio M Cunha (a) and Witold Brostow (c, d)
(a) Institute for Polymers and composites, Department of Polymer
Engineering,
University of Minho, 4800-058 Guimaraes, Portugal,
rsimoes@ipca.pt,
amcuhna@dep.uminho.pt
(b) School of Technology, Plytechnic Institute of Cavado and Ave, 4750-117 Barcelos, Portugal
(c) Laboratory of Advanced Polymers and Optimized Materials (LAPOM),
Department of Materials Science, University of North Texas, Denton, TX
76203-5310, USA;
Denton, TX 76203, USA; brostow@unt.edu;
(d) College of Mechanics and robotics, University of Science and
Technology,
Adama Michiewicza 30, 30-059 Cracow, Poland.
Deformation brings out important features of viscoelastic behaviour in
polymers. To achieve a better understanding of the underlying phenomena,
molecular dynamics simulations have been performed for one and two-phase
polymeric materials created on the computer. An external force was applied
to the materials and their response followed as a function of time.
The mechanical properties were found to be strongly affected buy the loading
conditions, particularly the force increase rate. The simulated materials
exhibit a realistic response: the behaviour is more rigid and brittle when
the force increases at a higher rate. The material is able to partially
recover in a viscoelastic manner if the force is removed after deformation.
There are both quantitative and qualitative differences between the
engineering stress and true stress. The presence of a rigid phase in polymer
liquid crystals (PLCs) significantly influences their mechanical properties.
Higher liquie crystalline (LC) phase concentrations increase stiffness while
they make the polymer more brittle. The viscoelastic phase shift is smaller
in PLCs than in one-phase amorphous polymers; the LC-rich islands in the
LC-poor matrix make the material more elastic.
When a creep force is applied for some time and then removed, the material
exhibits partial viscoelastic recovery. The extent of that recovery is
dependent on the magnitude of the creep force; a higher applied force
results in less recovery. It also depends on the time during which the force
was applied; longer times will result in less recovery. These results could
be expected, confirming the model's validity. Unexpectedly the deformation
mechanism at higher stress levels were found to be different from those
taking place at lower force levels. This reflects on a more localized
deformation for higher creep force levels.