Read Callister, Chapters 15 and 16. Solve and hand in Problems 15.16, 15.22, 15.35, 15.44, 16.11, 16.18, 16.20, 16.22, due date Wednesday March 3.
Question 15.16
The tensile strength and number-average molecular weight for two polyethylene materials are as follows:
Tensile Strength MPa | Num. Av. Mol. Wt.(gm/mol) |
---|---|
85 | 12,700 |
150 | 28,500 |
Estimate the number-average molecular weight that is required to give a tensile strength of 195 MPa.
Answer 15.16
This requires Equation 15.3,
TS = TSinfinity - A/MN
We use the given data to find TSinfinity and A. Then we put TS = 195 MPa and solve for MN.
There is one tricky bit to this question: the final step requires you to solve
MN = A/(TSinfinity-TS)
and TSinfinity is quite close in value to TS. Thus an error of 1% in TSinfinity results in an error of 20% in MN. So your figure for TSinfinity should be accurate to the fourth significant figure.
Question 15.22
Which of the following would you expect to be elastomers and which thermosetting polymers at room temperature? Justify each choice.
Answer 15.22
This is a potentially confusing question. For a start, each of the options listed is a single substance -- `linear and crystalline polyethylene' is one material, for example.
Secondly, `elastomers' and `thermosetting polymers' [`thermosets'] are not mutually exclusive options; in fact, most elastomers are thermosets.
Polymers can be divided into two mutually exclusive sets, thermoplasts and thermosets, according to whether they melt or decompose when heated. Thermoplasts tend to have straight or branched chains, possibly with van de Waals cross-links, while thermosets tend to have networked structures or primary-bond cross-links.
Being an elastomer is a property of a material at a given temperature; a single material may be an elastomer at one temperature and not at another. Elastomers always have an amorphous rather than crystalline structure, and their molecules must be cross-linked.
Question 15.35
During the winter months, the temperature in some parts of the Yukon may go as low as - 55 C. Of the elastomers natural polyisoprene, styrene-butadiene, acrylonitrile-butadiene, chloroprene and polysiloxane, which would be suitable for automobile tyres under these conditions? Why?
Answer 15.35
If we just look at the temperature ranges, natural polyisoprene, styrene-butadiene and polysiloxane all maintain their properties down to -55 C. But polysiloxane is not a strong material, and would probably not be suitable for tires. Styrene-butadiene is better, but might not have the weather-resistance.
Question 15.44
If you want to produce nylon 6, 6 by condensation polymerisation using hexamethylene diamine and adipic acid, what masses of these two components will be needed to yield 20 kg of completely linear nylon 6, 6?
Answer 15.44
We write down the molecular weights of the three substances and calculate their masses in the ratio of their molecular weights:
MW(adipic acid) = 146
MW(hexamethylene diamine) = 116.21
MW
and mass of hexamethylene diamine needed = 20 * 116/226 = 10.26 kg.
The most common thing to go wrong was calculating the MW of nylon; it's best to
do this from the structural diagram on p. 773. When one molecule of each of
the two reactants reacts to make one molecule of nylon, two molecules of water
condense out.
Question 16.11
A continuous and aligned fiber-reinforced composite is to be produced
consisting of 30 vol% aramid fibres and 70vol% of a polycarbonate matrix. Mechanical characteristics
of these two materials are as follows:
Also, the stress on the polycarbonate matrix when the aramid fibres fail is 45 MPa.
For this composite, compute (a) the longitudinal tensile strength and
(b) the longitudinal modulus of elasticity.
Answer 16.11
This is a simple application of Equation 16.17:
sigmacl=sigmam(1-Vf)+sigmafVf
= 45 * 0.7 + 3600*0.3 = 1111.5 MPa
And then of Equation 16.10a:
Ecl=EfVf+Em(1-Vf)
=131*0.3+2.4*0.7
=41 MPa.
Question 16.18
A continuous and aligned fibrous reinforced composite having a cross-sectional
area of 970 mm2 is subjected to an external tensile load.
If the stresses sustained by the fibre and matrix phases are 215 MPa and 5.38 MPa respectively,
the force sustained by the fibre phase is 76,800 N and the total longitudinal composite strain
is 1.56 * 10-3, then determine:
Answer 16.11
This question is noticeably longer than the others, so it's out of 4.
Af=76.8*103/(215*106)=357 mm2
So Vf=357/970=0.368
So area of matrix phase = 970 - 215 = 615 mm2
So force sustained by matrix = 5.38 * 615 N = 3,297 N
Stress = (76.8+3.297)/970 kN/mm2=82.6 MPa
So E = 82.6/(1.56*10-3)=52.9 GPa
E for matrix phase =5.38/(1.56*10-3)=3.449 GPa
Question 16.20
Suppose you want to produce an aligned carbon fibre-epoxy matrix composite having a longitudinal
tensile strength of 500 MPa. Calculate the volume fraction of fibres necessary if
Answer 16.20
For some reason the figures on the website aren't the same as those in the book.
So there are two possible solutions:
In each case, we need to know whether the fibres are longer than the critical
length , lc. We find this from Equation 16.3:
lc=sigmafd/(2 tauc)
which evaluates to 1.2 mm using the website figures, 0.8 mm using Callister's figures.
For the website, l = 2 mm, so l > lc and we calculate the volume fraction
via Equation 16.18:
sigmacd=sigmafVf(1-lc/2l)+sigmam(1-Vf)
So 1500 = 4000Vf(1-1.2/(2*2))+7*(1-Vf)
From which Vf=0.1765
For Callister, l = 0.5mm, so l < lc and we calculate the volume fraction
via Equation 16.19:
sigmacd=(l tauc/d)Vf+sigmam(1-Vf)
=25*0.5*0.001/(0.01*0.001)Vf+7(1-Vf)
From which Vf=0.3966.
Question 16.22
Answer 16.22
This involves solving Equation 16.20 for K:
Ecd=KEfVf+EmVm
Hence K = (Ecd-EmVm)/EfVf
Plugging in numbers, this gives us that
K(20%) = 0.277
K(30%) = 0.319
K(40%)=0.350
The second part of the question asked you to find Ecd
for Vf = 50%.
Assuming K varies linearly with Vf is not the
way to solve this; the results for the first part show that it
doesn't vary linearly. You could either observe that
Ecd does vary almost linearly with Vf
to conclude that Ecd(50%) = 14.8 MPa, or you could
curve-fit for K vs. Vf, using the above three
points plus the fact that K = 1 when Vf=1.
Modulus of Elasticity (GPa)
Tensile Strength (MPa)
Aramid Fibre
131
3,600
Polycarbonate
2.4
65