Impact Resilience in Testing Channel Black

1937 ◽  
Vol 10 (4) ◽  
pp. 807-819 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. H. Fielding

Abstract THE precise grading of carbon black has been a problem to rubber manufacturers for years. Empirical specification tests inherited from the paint and ink industries have been used extensively; although they may have great merit in predicting the behavior of a black in paint or ink, they generally tell very little of its value in rubber. Since neither these tests nor the usual stress-strain data showed any great differences that could be associated with type of carbon black, chemists have been inclined to believe in the past that the rubber grade of channel black was quite a uniform material, at least when used in mercaptobenzothiazole stocks. Among the tests which have been used recently in the grading of black is resilience of the cured stock as determined by an impact pendulum. Although superficially it seems to measure no fundamental property of the black, it is a very practical test from a laboratory standpoint and appears to be capable of at least rough correlation with more fundamental properties. It is not a new property; the fact that it is influenced by carbon black is not new; but its application to the separation of blacks within the range of rubber channel black is new, and this phase will be discussed here.

1946 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 773-780
Author(s):  
Ian C. Rush

Abstract Moisture has been discussed as a factor which may give rise to variable rates of cure of GR-S. This moisture may be present in GR-S itself or in the compounding ingredients used. Accordingly, a program was initiated in the spring of 1944 to establish the influence of moisture, not only on the rate of cure of GR-S, but also on its physical properties. Since that time two papers have been published on this subject by other investigators. The results reported here verify some of the conclusions drawn by these investigators but seem to be at variance with others. In this study various proportions of water were added in the following ways : by premixing with carbon black, by adding directly on the mill rolls at the completion of normal milling, and by soaking GR-S crumb in water. Curing curves were obtained for each batch, and were used to evaluate the rate of cure. To eliminate day-to-day variations in physical properties due to error in testing methods, three batches of different moisture contents were mixed and tested on the same day. This same group was then remixed and tested on successive days until at least three batches had been tested for each moisture content and each method of addition. The averages of the individual results (stress-strain data and percentage moisture retained) on batches to which the same percentage of water was added, were then considered free from day-to-day variations.


1982 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 37-54 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Kumar ◽  
C. W. Bert

Abstract Unidirectional cord-rubber specimens in the form of tensile coupons and sandwich beams were used. Using specimens with the cords oriented at 0°, 45°, and 90° to the loading direction and appropriate data reduction, we were able to obtain complete characterization for the in-plane stress-strain response of single-ply, unidirectional cord-rubber composites. All strains were measured by means of liquid mercury strain gages, for which the nonlinear strain response characteristic was obtained by calibration. Stress-strain data were obtained for the cases of both cord tension and cord compression. Materials investigated were aramid-rubber, polyester-rubber, and steel-rubber.


2005 ◽  
Vol 24 (4) ◽  
pp. 209-222 ◽  
Author(s):  
S.P. Mahapatra ◽  
D.K. Tripathy

Compressive stress-strain properties of unfilled and conductive carbon black (VulcanXC 72) filled oil extended EPDM (keltan 7341A) microcellular vulcanizates were studied as a function of blowing agent (density) and filler loading. With decrease in density, the compressive stress-strain curves for microcellular vulcanizates behaved differently from those of solid vulcanizates. The compressive stress-strain properties were found to be strain rate dependent. The log-log plots of relative density of the microcellular vulcanizates showed a fairly linear correlation with the relative modulus. The compression set at a constant stress increased with decrease in density. The efficiency of energy absorption E, was also studied as a function of filler and blowing agent loading. From the compressive stress-strain plots the efficiency E and the ideality parameter I, were evaluated. These parameters were plotted against stress to obtain maximum efficiency and the maximum ideality region, which will make these materials suitable for cushioning and packaging applications in electronic devices.


1986 ◽  
Vol 59 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-141 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robert A. Hayes

Abstract A two-solvent method for determining the polymer-solvent interaction parameters independently of stress-strain data is described. The values obtained are much lower than those reported previously. Network densities calculated from swelling data and these interaction parameters are in good agreement with those calculated from the return portion of a hysteresis loop at high elongations.


1968 ◽  
Vol 8 (03) ◽  
pp. 304-312 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Mahtab ◽  
R.E. Goodman

ABSTRACT The state of stress around a vertical wellbore in rock following nonlinear stress-strain laws is examined by means of finite element analysis. The wellbore is considered an axisymmetric body with axisymmetric loading. The initial vertical and horizontal stresses are "locked" in the rock elements around the wellbore and a new state of stress is generated by the displacements which occur around the borehole. A point-wise variation of the elastic moduli is made on the basis of the new stress state and the triaxial data. The initial stresses are now reintroduced along with the changed moduli and original boundary constraints. This procedure is repeated until convergent stresses are reached. The effect of nonlinearity on stresses is examined for a 6,000-ft wellbore in a schistose gneiss and Berea sandstone using results of laboratory triaxial compression tests. The results show that the effect is restricted to one well radius from the bottom periphery of the hole. Beyond a distance of one-quarter radius, the effect of nonlinearity on stresses is almost always less than 5 percent for the cases considered. The consideration of a static pressure inside the well does not magnify the effect of nonlinearity on borehole stresses. INTRODUCTION The terms "wellbore" and "borehole" here designate cylindrical openings in the ground with vertical axis and a circular cross-section. A knowledge of the stress redistribution that occurs on excavating a wellbore is important in understanding the behavior of the lined or unlined hole, hydraulic fracture response, and the effect of stress redistribution on drillability; also it is important in predicting initial stresses in the virgin ground, and in analyzing the response of measuring instruments placed in the borehole. Our knowledge of the state of stress around a wellbore has been restricted to homogeneous, isotropic, elastic material and derives chiefly from the analysis by Miles and Topping1 and the photoelastic work of Galle and Wilhoit2 and Word and Wilhoit.3 In this investigation the state of stress is examined for a nonlinear elastic material by means of finite element analysis. Many rocks possess stress-strain curves that depart notably from straight lines in their initial or final portions. While the literature contains abundant stress-strain data from triaxial tests (axisymmetric loading) on cylindrical rock specimens, there is little information on rock deformability under nonaxisymmetric loading conditions such as occur at each point around the bottom of a wellbore. Although there is some knowledge of the effect of intermediate principal stress on rock strength, there is virtually nothing known about its effect on rock deformability; therefore, we have assumed here that the effect of intermediate principal stress can be ignored. A schistose gneiss4 and Berea sandstone5 were selected as representative rocks for this analysis. The traditional graphs of deviator stress (s1-s3) vs axial strain were reworked to give the tangent modulus as a function of the deviator stress for varying values of the minor principal stress. The result is a nesting family of skewed, bell-shaped curves for the gneiss (Fig. 1A) and the sandstone (Fig. 2A). A similar replotting of the lateral strain data defines the variation of Poisson's ratio (?) with the deviator stress and confining pressure. These curves, shown in Fig. 1B for the gneiss and in Fig. 2B for the sandstone, are not so well ordered as the tangent modulus curves. However, all of these display an increase of ? with deviator stress application, but the rate of increase diminishes with confinement. The ET and ? curves for the two rock types are tabulated in Tables 1A and 1B for use in a digital computer so that material properties corresponding to a given state of stress can be assigned by interpolation.


1945 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 286-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. Goldfinger

Abstract In the fundamental study of the influence of reinforcing pigments, particularly carbon black on rubber, one of the great experimental difficulties is to establish the stress-strain properties of that fraction of the rubber stock which is between the pigment particles, and whose deformation, influenced by the presence of the pigment, is the quantity desired. This paper shows that it is not justifiable to assume that the rubber between pigment particles is equivalent in properties to the original gum stock without pigment, because the addition of pigment induces fractionation of the rubber in such a manner as to concentrate preferentially one molecular configuration around the pigment particle, and hence leave the rubber richer in some other configuration in the spaces between pigment particles.


Tail tendons from Fischer and Sprague-Dawly albino rats of ages from 2 weeks to 3 years were investigated under the polarizing microscope as regards structure and deformation behaviour. Periodically extinguishing bands were observed along the otherwise featureless tendons. By analysing the behaviour of this extinction pattern under appropriate rotations of the tendon, it could be deduced that the orientation of the basic birefringent units varies periodically along the tendon and that this periodic pattern corresponds to a planar arrangement of the anisotropic entities. All the relevant parameters of this periodic structure could be determined in a representative manner from polarizing optics alone. Subdivision of the tendons revealed regularly undulating or rather crimped subunits in good correspondence to what has been deduced from the extinction bands in the intact tendons. The crimp angle was found to decrease while the periodicity increased - in approximate proportion to the length of the tail - with the age of the rat implying constancy of crimp number during the life time of the animal. On elongation the periodicity was gradually removed. The calculated fibre elongation necessary to eliminate the crimp was in good agreement with observation for mature rats but was larger for young rats implying the simultaneous stretching of the fibre itself. Stress-strain properties of tendons were measured and models for crimp straightening were tested. It was found that a model containing inflexible hinges, corresponding to the ‘elastica’ problem in mechanics gave reasonable fit with experiment. Analysis of stress-strain data on this basis leads to a basic load bearing unit, the diameter of which increases from 100 to 500 nm with the age of the animal. Implications of these findings for the structure and properties of the tendons, also in relation to ageing are pointed out.


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mazin S. Sirry ◽  
Laura Dubuis ◽  
Neil H. Davies ◽  
Jun Liao ◽  
Thomas Franz

AbstractFinite element (FE) models have been effectively utilized in studying biomechanical aspects of myocardial infarction (MI). Although the rat is a widely used animal model for MI, there is a lack of material parameters based on anisotropic constitutive models for rat myocardial infarcts in literature. This study aimed at employing inverse methods to identify the parameters of an orthotropic constitutive model for myocardial infarcts in the acute, necrotic, fibrotic and remodelling phases utilizing the biaxial mechanical data developed in a previous study. FE model was developed mimicking the setup of the biaxial tensile experiment. The orthotropic case of the generalized Fung constitutive model was utilized to model the material properties of the infarct. The parameters of Fung model were optimized so that the FE solution best fitted the biaxial experimental stress-strain data. A genetic algorithm was used to minimize the objective function. Fung orthotropic material parameters for different infarct stages were identified. The FE model predictions best approximated the experimental data of the 28 days infarct stage with 3.0% mean absolute percentage error. The worst approximation was for the 7 days stage with 3.6% error. This study demonstrated that the experimental biaxial stress-strain data of healing rat infarcts could be successfully approximated using inverse FE methods and genetic algorithms. The material parameters identified in this study will provide an essential platform for FE investigations of biomechanical aspects of MI and the development of therapies.


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