tetmesh
Mechanical
- Jan 6, 2011
- 9
Hi All,
I'm trying to wrap my head around viscoelastic testing. I would expect greater energy loss (higher tan delta) at lower frequencies/strain rates for creep and strain relaxation reasons, and greater energy loss at higher frequencies as bonds in polymer chains are more pulled and broken, rather than a slower unfolding of the chains. I see this in data from two methods of viscoelastic testing we're benchmarking but when considering the two tests, I confused myself about a potential influence of specimen size. A small specimen on a DMA specific machine and a larger specimen on a larger dynamic load frame will effectively have different 'spring rates' because of different widths. With different spring rates, there's a different natural frequency for each, and I'd expect the energy loss (or efficiency?) to depend on the natural frequency - much like pumping legs too slow or too fast won't get you anywhere on a trampoline. There should be a 'most efficient' frequency. Is the trampoline analogy too simple? I'm trying to account for small differences in the two measurement results and specimen size is one of the differences in the measurements. Thanks in advance for any ideas, thoughts, or references!
I'm trying to wrap my head around viscoelastic testing. I would expect greater energy loss (higher tan delta) at lower frequencies/strain rates for creep and strain relaxation reasons, and greater energy loss at higher frequencies as bonds in polymer chains are more pulled and broken, rather than a slower unfolding of the chains. I see this in data from two methods of viscoelastic testing we're benchmarking but when considering the two tests, I confused myself about a potential influence of specimen size. A small specimen on a DMA specific machine and a larger specimen on a larger dynamic load frame will effectively have different 'spring rates' because of different widths. With different spring rates, there's a different natural frequency for each, and I'd expect the energy loss (or efficiency?) to depend on the natural frequency - much like pumping legs too slow or too fast won't get you anywhere on a trampoline. There should be a 'most efficient' frequency. Is the trampoline analogy too simple? I'm trying to account for small differences in the two measurement results and specimen size is one of the differences in the measurements. Thanks in advance for any ideas, thoughts, or references!