Application of Viscoelasticity to the Processibility of Elastomers

1970 ◽  
Vol 43 (5) ◽  
pp. 1082-1099 ◽  
Author(s):  
E. G. Kontos

Abstract The processibility of elastomers can be studied systematically by splitting up the process into component unit operations. By applying the theories of applied mechanics and taking into consideration the viscoelastic nature of raw rubbers modest theoretical progress has been made in predicting and correcting processing deficiencies. Important viscoelastic properties affecting the rheological behavior of rubbers have been identified. The existing relationships between macromolecular structure and the important viscoelastic properties have been presented for several synthetic rubbers. The dependence of some unit operations such as milling, calendering, and building on maximum relaxation time and viscosity has been demonstrated.

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Emilia M. Grad ◽  
Isabell Tunn ◽  
Dion Voerman ◽  
Alberto S. de Léon ◽  
Roel Hammink ◽  
...  

Biological materials combine stress relaxation and self-healing with non-linear stress-strain responses. These characteristic features are a direct result of hierarchical self-assembly, which often results in fiber-like architectures. Even though structural knowledge is rapidly increasing, it has remained a challenge to establish relationships between microscopic and macroscopic structure and function. Here, we focus on understanding how network topology determines the viscoelastic properties, i.e. stress relaxation, of biomimetic hydrogels. We have dynamically crosslinked two different synthetic polymers with one and the same crosslink. The first polymer, a polyisocyanopeptide (PIC), self-assembles into semi-flexible, fiber-like bundles and thus displays stress-stiffening, similar to many biopolymer networks. The second polymer, 4-arm poly(ethylene glycol) (starPEG), serves as a reference network with well-characterized structural and viscoelastic properties. Using one and the same coiled coil crosslink allows us to decouple the effects of crosslink kinetics and network topology on the stress relaxation behavior of the resulting hydrogel networks. We show that the fiber-containing PIC network displays a relaxation time approximately two orders of magnitude slower than the starPEG network. This reveals that crosslink kinetics is not the only determinant for stress relaxation. Instead, we propose that the different network topologies determine the ability of elastically active network chains to relax stress. In the starPEG network, each elastically active chain contains exactly one crosslink. In the absence of entanglements, crosslink dissociation thus relaxes the entire chain. In contrast, each polymer is crosslinked to the fiber bundle in multiple positions in the PIC hydrogel. The dissociation of a single crosslink is thus not sufficient for chain relaxation. This suggests that tuning the number of crosslinks per elastically active chain in combination with crosslink kinetics is a powerful design principle for tuning stress relaxation in polymeric materials. The presence of a higher number of crosslinks per elastically active chain thus yields materials with a slow macroscopic relaxation time but fast dynamics at the microscopic level. Using this principle for the design of synthetic cell culture matrices will yield materials with excellent long-term stability combined with the ability to locally reorganize, thus facilitating cell motility, spreading and growth.


2011 ◽  
Vol 391-392 ◽  
pp. 138-142
Author(s):  
Wen Bin Yang ◽  
Ming Xin Zhang ◽  
En Hui Chen

The rheological behavior of plant flour reinforced thermoplastics composites is very important to practical industry, however few research especially research about bamboo flour reinforced polypropylene(PP) composites is available regarding rheological field. In this paper, the torque rheometer made in Shanghai was used to examine the flow behavior of bamboo flour filled PP composites. The orthogonal test was adopted to analyze how three factors(weight percentage of bamboo, weight percentage of MAPP and rotate speed) influence the behavior of composites. The result indicated that bamboo flour filled PP composites was pseudo-plastics or shear-thinning flow under the experimental condition investigated. The effect of weight percentage of bamboo on rheological peoperties was signigficant,but the effect of both of the rest of two factors on rheological was not significant under the given experimental condition.


2015 ◽  
Vol 801 ◽  
pp. 115-121 ◽  
Author(s):  
Polidor Bratu

This paper presents dynamic analysis of rheological behavior of materials modeled as a body under stationary harmonic dynamic action.Excitation force is inertial, because of rotation of eccentric mass, applied directly to the Maxwell rheological body.Based on theoretical and experimental results are highlighted functions for defining both the energy dissipated as hysteresis loops in physical conditions of linear behavior of the components of the Maxwell model.In this context are represented the representative sets of curves that outlines the progress of dissipation made in relation with the dynamic system parameters.


1999 ◽  
Vol 72 (4) ◽  
pp. 657-672 ◽  
Author(s):  
Fumito Yatsuyanagi ◽  
Hiroyuki Kaidou ◽  
Masayoshi Ito

Abstract The wide-line NMR and viscoelastic measurements were carried out for the filled rubber systems. NMR results revealed that the filler-gel in the filled rubber composites had a multi-component system depending on the mobility of rubber molecules. The fraction and the spin-spin relaxation time of each component were well correlated with the viscoelastic properties such as dynamic storage modulus (E′) and loss-tangent (tan δ) of the filled rubber systems. Such findings turned out to be useful in designing new tread materials with well-balanced wet traction and rolling resistance in tires.


1976 ◽  
Vol 49 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. N. Avgeropoulos ◽  
F. C. Weissert ◽  
P. H. Biddison ◽  
G. G. A. Böhm

Abstract A single polymer pair (BR and EPDM) was used to confirm experimentally rheology-morphology relationships that have been previously gleaned from comparison of a variety of blend systems. The relative importance of the primary factors which govern blend morphology (composition and relative mixing viscosity of the components) was determined over the range of practical interest. In addition, correlation of mixing rheology with more accurate and complete shear modulus data allowed (a) molecular interpretation of rheological behavior in terms of network parameters, such as physical entanglements, and (b) estimation of the elastic and loss components of the shear modulus during mixing. An attempt was made at explaining the dependence of blend morphology on the viscoelastic properties of the components in terms of a fracture or tearing mechanism.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chen Hu ◽  
Lukas Hahn ◽  
Mengshi Yang ◽  
Alexander Altmann ◽  
Philipp Stahlhut ◽  
...  

As a promising biofabrication technology, extrusion-based bioprinting has gained significant attention in the last decade and major advances have been made in the development of bioinks. However suitable synthetic and stimuli-responsive bioinks are underrepresented in this context. <a>In this work, we described a hybrid system of nanoclay Laponite XLG and thermoresponsive block copolymer poly(2-methyl-2-oxazoline)-<i>b</i>-poly(2-<i>n</i>-propyl-2-oxazine) (PMeOx-<i>b</i>-PnPrOzi) as a novel biomaterial ink, and discussed its critical properties relevant for extrusion-based bioprinting, including viscoelastic properties and printability.</a> <a>The hybrid hydrogel retains the thermogelling properties but is strengthened by the added clay (over 5 kPa of storage modulus, and 240 Pa of yield stress). Importantly, the shear-thinning character is further enhanced, which, in combination with very rapid viscosity recovery (~1 s) and structure recovery (~10 s) is highly beneficial for extrusion-based 3D printing. Accordingly, various 3D patterns could be printed with markedly enhanced resolution and shape fidelity compared to the biomaterial ink without added clay.</a>


2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-131
Author(s):  
K.G. Klein

This work is aimed at summarizing the theoretical progress made in understanding the role of perceived locus of causality in various activities The problem of the method of measuring the perceived locus of causality is analyzed. It is emphasized that for this design it is a multidimensional approach to measurement, which considers all types of causality locus as separate constructs, turns out to be the most promising one. Particular attention is paid to determinants and correlates, such as motivational regulation, in the context of educational activities, which attracts a multidimensional approach in its measurement oftener than in the analysis of other forms of activity.


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