EngForm78
Mechanical
- May 6, 2005
- 29
I am working on a problem concerning the compression yield of plastics due to expansion from heating. Does anyone has thoughts or information on the response of plastics in this type of case?
Here is brief description of the problem:
If I were to constrain a bar at room temp so that it could not expand but only contract. Then heat it to some point were it has taken a compression set and return to room temperture. I will see that the part is shorter than at first because of the yielding. Now reheat it to a higher temperature, and then return to room temperature and measure the gap. Then contiue this cycle with successviely higher temps and measuring the gap each time.
Will the bar in question at some points not take a set because the previous set is large enough that the bar cannot expand to the constraints again? I see a response like this in some of my tests. Could it be something else?
Thanks
EngForm78
Here is brief description of the problem:
If I were to constrain a bar at room temp so that it could not expand but only contract. Then heat it to some point were it has taken a compression set and return to room temperture. I will see that the part is shorter than at first because of the yielding. Now reheat it to a higher temperature, and then return to room temperature and measure the gap. Then contiue this cycle with successviely higher temps and measuring the gap each time.
Will the bar in question at some points not take a set because the previous set is large enough that the bar cannot expand to the constraints again? I see a response like this in some of my tests. Could it be something else?
Thanks
EngForm78