Study of the thermomechanical behavior of UHMWPE yarns under different loading paths

2020 
Abstract UHMWPE viscoelastic fibers show great interest as reinforcement within composites and especially when used in SRPs (Self-Reinforced Polymers). They provide ductility, lightness and recyclability, benefits that glass or carbon fibers cannot provide. It is, therefore, necessary to increase knowledge about the behavior of UHMWPE fibers. Before the thermomechanical characterization of these yarns, an experimental protocol is proposed, validated and it supplements the existing standard. Monotonous, load-unload and creep tensile tests were carried out on Doyentrontex® yarns. Temperature and strain rate dependencies were observed. A time-temperature superposition is used to reconstruct the evolutions of modulus at 0.5%, maximum strength, and strain at break at 23 °C over a wide range of strain rates. The behavior of the yarns studied appears to be complex. Indeed, at low temperatures, a hyperelastic type of behavior, combined with plasticity, predominates whereas a more elasto-viscoplastic one emerges at 100 °C. From creep tests, a time-temperature-stress level superposition leads to the reconstruction of the yarns creep behavior over a long period at the reference temperature 23 °C and the reference stress level, which is 40% of the stress at break in tensile tests at any given test temperature.
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