Author: Parsons M. Stepanov E.V. Hiltner A. Baer E.
Publisher: Springer Publishing Company
ISSN: 0022-2461
Source: Journal of Materials Science, Vol.34, Iss.14, 1999-07, pp. : 3315-3326
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Abstract
The kinetics and mechanism of slow crack growth in fatigue and creep of high density polyethylene were studied. The relationship between fatigue and creep was examined by varying the R-ratio (the minimum/maximum loads in the fatigue loading cycle) in the tensile mode such that loading ranged from mainly dynamic (R = 0.1) to static (R = 1.0, creep test). The stepwise crack propagation mechanism characteristic of long-term failures in polyethylene was observed for all loading conditions studied. Fatigue fracture kinetics allowed for extrapolation to the case of creep failure, which suggested that short-term fatigue testing can be used to predict long-term creep fracture properties. The size of the craze damage zone ahead of the arrested crack tip was controlled only by the mean stress, however the lifetime of the zone was determined by both the maximum stress and the mean stress. Crack growth rate was related to the maximum stress and the mean stress by a power law relationship, which described crack growth over the entire range of loading conditions studied.