Conference proceedings article

Man-Made Cellulose Fiber Reinforced Polypropylene - Characterization of Fracture Toughness and Crack Path Simulation, Society of Plastics Engineers, ANTEC 2017, 693-698



Publication Details
Authors:
Zarges, J.; Feldmann, M.; Heim, H.; Judt, P.; Ricoeur, A.
Editor:
Society of Plastics Engineers (SPE)
Publisher:
Curran Associates, Inc.
Place:
Red Hook, NY

Publication year:
2017
Pages range :
693-698
Book title:
SPE ANTEC 2017
ISBN:
9781713801962


Abstract

This investigation focuses on the fracture toughness of injection molded man-made cellulose fibers reinforced composites with PP as their matrix and 30wt% fiber content. The influence of the fiber orientation and the addition of a coupling agent on the fracture toughness was determined using SEM and a micro computer tomography. It was verified that a reinforcement with man-made cellulose fibers leads to significantly higher values of the critical Jc-integral in comparison to glass fiber reinforcement. A notch direction parallel to the flow direction shows higher values which is a result of less local strains around the crack path, as well as of a higher amount of fiber pull-outs in the fractured surface. The coupling agent MAPP creates stronger fiber-matrix adhesion, which results in a decreasing of the Jc-values due to less fiber pull-outs. The determined values of the critical Jc-integral and the crack deflection due to the materials anisotropy were used to apply a crack deflection criterion. The resulting calculated crack paths achieved a good approximation to the experiments.


Last updated on 2025-24-01 at 08:45