Creep question...
Creep question...
(OP)
I'm investigating creep of epoxy and I've found some formulas and we're currently doing some tests. From the formulas (and also from the prelimenary test results) it seems that creep never ends... But it must end at some point I guess. Is there anybody with experience in this field??
Thnx
Wim
Thnx
Wim





RE: Creep question...
RE: Creep question...
RE: Creep question...
RE: Creep question...
Can you give me a web-page, or book/publication were I can find these curves?
Has any material creep, concrete, steel etc.?
RE: Creep question...
Yes, a material may fail due to a constant applied stress that is below the allowable stress (if the allowable stress was determined by quasi-static loading at room temperature). Whether a material is susceptible to creep depends upon the composition, bonding, microstructure, stress, and temperature. It sounds like you need to educate yourself with a textbook on this subject. Some books to consider include Physical Metallurgy Principles by Reed-Hill and Deformation and Fracture Mechanics of Engineering Materials by Hertzberg.
RE: Creep question...
Atlas of Creep and Stress-Rupture Curves
http://www.asminternational.org/Template.cfm?Section=BrowsebyTopic&template=Ecommerce/ProductDisplay.cfm&ProductID=10554
RE: Creep question...
I can only add to the chorous. Creep never stops. It is always occurring, albeit with suitable materials it can be minimized or ignored for a given time span, but it is always present.
I would add that creep is included in establishing the allowable stress. The published allowable stress tables (ASME) for vessels and piping only apply for the temperatures indicated and typically restricted to 7000 daily heatup/cool down cycles (~ 20 years service).
RE: Creep question...
There are in general three stages to creep deformation. During the initial stage, called primary creep, the strain increases rapidly with time. During stage II, called secondary creep, the material enters a steady state and the strain increases steadily with time. During stage III the strain increases rapidly with time until failure occurs. The useful life of a material is usually spent in stage II, so that secondary creep plays a dominant role in determining the lifetime of a component. An empirical formula for the steady state creep rate is given by,
Creep Rate = A*[(stress)^n]*exp{-(Q/RT)}
where A is the creep constant, n is the creep exponent (which usually lies between 3 and 8), Q is the activation energy, R is the universal gas constant, and T is the absolute temperature. If we know A, n, and Q for a specific material, then we can calculate the strain rate at any temperature and stress. For a fixed temperature, this equation represents what is known as power law creep.
There are two distinct mechanisms for creep: dislocation creep and diffusional creep. Both are limited by the rate of atomic diffusion, so both follow an exponential temperature dependence according to Arrhenius’s Law. Dislocations possess the following characteristics:
1.) Except for a few cases, plastic deformation and dislocation motion are mutually inclusive; one cannot occur without the other.
2.) The mobility of a dislocation is affected by two things; the inherent lattice resistance to its motion, and the obstacles that are placed in its path. These obstacles may include hard precipitates and other dislocations.
When a dislocation encounters an obstacle, it slows down. But if the temperature of the material is greater than about 0.3Tm, atoms may diffuse around the obstacle quickly enough to “unlock” the dislocation. This makes it much easier for the dislocation to move past the obstacle. The motion of these “unlocked” dislocations under the applied stress is what leads to dislocation creep.
So how does this happen? When a dislocation encounters a hard precipitate, it can’t glide upwards to clear the obstacle because that would force it out of its slip plane. But if the atoms at the bottom of the half-plane are able to diffuse away, then the net effect is that the dislocation climbs upward. The applied stress acts as a mechanical driving force for this to occur. After the dislocation climbs high enough, it can clear the precipitate and then continue to move along its slip plane. After a short time it will encounter another obstacle, and the whole process repeats itself. This explains the slow, continuous nature of dislocation creep. Does this answer your question?
Maui
RE: Creep question...
Thanks for your answer. It clears up a lot of things. In the mean time I've found some different formulas and models, for visco-elastic approach of creep (I believe it's called Burger's model) and is as follows:
strain (t)= stress * (((sin (m*pi))/m*pi)/E0) * t exp m
where m is a material constant (normally between 0.1 and 0.33)
E0 is E-modulus
t is time in seconds
Are you familiar with this formula? The creep I'm investigating is of an epoxy at room temperature, so not of steel.
RE: Creep question...
Wouldn't it be more accurate to call the quantity that you're attempting to measure viscoelastic flow?
RE: Creep question...
The Burger model indeed refers to Viscoelastic flow, but it seems to be quite accurate for epoxy like materials.