Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces

In this study an experimental program was carried out to determine the thermal contact resistance at polymer interfaces. Specifically, a polycarbonate to stainless steel interface along with a polycarbonate to polycarbonate interface were investigated. The thermal contact resistance at a stai...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gibbins, Josh
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: University of Waterloo 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2856
id ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-2856
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-WATERLOO-oai-uwspace.uwaterloo.ca-10012-28562013-01-08T18:50:04ZGibbins, Josh2007-05-08T13:46:44Z2007-05-08T13:46:44Z20062006http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2856In this study an experimental program was carried out to determine the thermal contact resistance at polymer interfaces. Specifically, a polycarbonate to stainless steel interface along with a polycarbonate to polycarbonate interface were investigated. The thermal contact resistance at a stainless steel to stainless steel interface was also investigated for comparison purposes. Experimental data was obtained over a pressure range of approximately 600 - 7000 <em>kPa</em>, in a vacuum environment. <br /><br /> The experimental data was compared to the CMY plastic contact model, the Mikic elastic contact model and the SY elasto-plastic contact model to investigate the ability of such established thermal contact models to predict the thermal contact resistance at polymer interfaces. Based upon predictions made in regards to the mode of deformation of the asperities on the contacting surfaces the appropriate contact model showed good agreement with the experimental data for the stainless steel-stainless steel data set and the polycarbonate-stainless steel data sets. There was poor agreement between the all three contact models and the experimental data for the polycarbonate-polycarbonate data sets. It was determined that uncertainties in the proposed experimental method prevented an accurate measurement of the thermal contact resistance values for the polycarbonate-polycarbonate data sets. <br /><br /> The purpose of this investigation was to extend the use of established thermal contact models to polymer interfaces and to provide a comparison between the thermal contact resistance values of metal and polymer interfaces. <br /><br /> Thermal contact resistance for the polymer to metal interface was shown to be predicted by the Mikic elastic contact model in comparison to the metal to metal interface which was shown to be predicted by the CMY plastic contact model. The thermal contact resistance for a polymer interface was found to be on the same order as a metal interface.application/pdf1422485 bytesapplication/pdfenUniversity of WaterlooCopyright: 2006, Gibbins, Josh. All rights reserved.Mechanical EngineeringThermal Contact Resistance of Polymer InterfacesThesis or DissertationMechanical EngineeringMaster of Applied Science
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Mechanical Engineering
spellingShingle Mechanical Engineering
Gibbins, Josh
Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
description In this study an experimental program was carried out to determine the thermal contact resistance at polymer interfaces. Specifically, a polycarbonate to stainless steel interface along with a polycarbonate to polycarbonate interface were investigated. The thermal contact resistance at a stainless steel to stainless steel interface was also investigated for comparison purposes. Experimental data was obtained over a pressure range of approximately 600 - 7000 <em>kPa</em>, in a vacuum environment. <br /><br /> The experimental data was compared to the CMY plastic contact model, the Mikic elastic contact model and the SY elasto-plastic contact model to investigate the ability of such established thermal contact models to predict the thermal contact resistance at polymer interfaces. Based upon predictions made in regards to the mode of deformation of the asperities on the contacting surfaces the appropriate contact model showed good agreement with the experimental data for the stainless steel-stainless steel data set and the polycarbonate-stainless steel data sets. There was poor agreement between the all three contact models and the experimental data for the polycarbonate-polycarbonate data sets. It was determined that uncertainties in the proposed experimental method prevented an accurate measurement of the thermal contact resistance values for the polycarbonate-polycarbonate data sets. <br /><br /> The purpose of this investigation was to extend the use of established thermal contact models to polymer interfaces and to provide a comparison between the thermal contact resistance values of metal and polymer interfaces. <br /><br /> Thermal contact resistance for the polymer to metal interface was shown to be predicted by the Mikic elastic contact model in comparison to the metal to metal interface which was shown to be predicted by the CMY plastic contact model. The thermal contact resistance for a polymer interface was found to be on the same order as a metal interface.
author Gibbins, Josh
author_facet Gibbins, Josh
author_sort Gibbins, Josh
title Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
title_short Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
title_full Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
title_fullStr Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
title_full_unstemmed Thermal Contact Resistance of Polymer Interfaces
title_sort thermal contact resistance of polymer interfaces
publisher University of Waterloo
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/10012/2856
work_keys_str_mv AT gibbinsjosh thermalcontactresistanceofpolymerinterfaces
_version_ 1716572868577329152