Artigo Revisado por pares

Analysis of the area of material really tested by TMA

2004; Elsevier BV; Volume: 414; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1016/j.tca.2004.01.012

ISSN

1872-762X

Autores

J. Zielnica, P. Wasilewicz, B. Jurkowski, B. Jurkowska,

Tópico(s)

Thermal properties of materials

Resumo

Deformation distribution within the specimen beneath the thermomechanical analysis (TMA) probe, found by using the finite element method (FEM), depends mainly on penetration depth, specimen thickness and diameter as well as on radius of the probe tip when the Poisson’s ratio influences it just slightly. For standard radius of the tip Ro=1 mm, most deformation is distributed in a material layer up to 0.5 mm thick independently on elastic modulus of a polymer at a glassy state. It is caused by the fact that maximal penetration depth for the polymers usually equals to about 0.05 mm. Because of this, the contact surface area is less than 0.17 mm2 for the standard radius of the tip. This evidences that predominantly the specimen volume equal to 0.5mm×0.17 mm2 (depth×area) is tested by the TMA at compression mode. For Ro=5 mm is tested the layer 2.5 mm thick. This makes possible to evaluate the material properties in the zone of different thickness depending on radius of the tip.

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