Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers

The addition of short fibers has been experimentally observed to slow the stress relaxation of viscoelastic polymers, producing a change in the relaxation time constant. Our recent study attributed this effect of fibers on stress relaxation behavior to the interfacial shear stress transfer at the fi...

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Main Authors: Numaira Obaid, Mark T. Kortschot, Mohini Sain
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2017-10-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/10/1207
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spelling doaj-b451aba4270a49938a8f176d9182d0582020-11-25T01:03:31ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442017-10-011010120710.3390/ma10101207ma10101207Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented FibersNumaira Obaid0Mark T. Kortschot1Mohini Sain2Advanced Materials Group, Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3E5, CanadaAdvanced Materials Group, Department of Chemical Engineering and Applied Chemistry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3E5, CanadaCentre for Biocomposites and Biomaterial Processing, Faculty of Forestry, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON M5S 3B3, CanadaThe addition of short fibers has been experimentally observed to slow the stress relaxation of viscoelastic polymers, producing a change in the relaxation time constant. Our recent study attributed this effect of fibers on stress relaxation behavior to the interfacial shear stress transfer at the fiber-matrix interface. This model explained the effect of fiber addition on stress relaxation without the need to postulate structural changes at the interface. In our previous study, we developed an analytical model for the effect of fully aligned short fibers, and the model predictions were successfully compared to finite element simulations. However, in most industrial applications of short-fiber composites, fibers are not aligned, and hence it is necessary to examine the time dependence of viscoelastic polymers containing randomly oriented short fibers. In this study, we propose an analytical model to predict the stress relaxation behavior of short-fiber composites where the fibers are randomly oriented. The model predictions were compared to results obtained from Monte Carlo finite element simulations, and good agreement between the two was observed. The analytical model provides an excellent tool to accurately predict the stress relaxation behavior of randomly oriented short-fiber composites.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/10/1207stress relaxationviscoelasticitycompositesrandom orientationsimulations
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Numaira Obaid
Mark T. Kortschot
Mohini Sain
spellingShingle Numaira Obaid
Mark T. Kortschot
Mohini Sain
Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
Materials
stress relaxation
viscoelasticity
composites
random orientation
simulations
author_facet Numaira Obaid
Mark T. Kortschot
Mohini Sain
author_sort Numaira Obaid
title Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
title_short Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
title_full Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
title_fullStr Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
title_full_unstemmed Modeling and Predicting the Stress Relaxation of Composites with Short and Randomly Oriented Fibers
title_sort modeling and predicting the stress relaxation of composites with short and randomly oriented fibers
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2017-10-01
description The addition of short fibers has been experimentally observed to slow the stress relaxation of viscoelastic polymers, producing a change in the relaxation time constant. Our recent study attributed this effect of fibers on stress relaxation behavior to the interfacial shear stress transfer at the fiber-matrix interface. This model explained the effect of fiber addition on stress relaxation without the need to postulate structural changes at the interface. In our previous study, we developed an analytical model for the effect of fully aligned short fibers, and the model predictions were successfully compared to finite element simulations. However, in most industrial applications of short-fiber composites, fibers are not aligned, and hence it is necessary to examine the time dependence of viscoelastic polymers containing randomly oriented short fibers. In this study, we propose an analytical model to predict the stress relaxation behavior of short-fiber composites where the fibers are randomly oriented. The model predictions were compared to results obtained from Monte Carlo finite element simulations, and good agreement between the two was observed. The analytical model provides an excellent tool to accurately predict the stress relaxation behavior of randomly oriented short-fiber composites.
topic stress relaxation
viscoelasticity
composites
random orientation
simulations
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/10/10/1207
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