Viscoelasticity of Glass-Forming Materials: What About Inorganic Sealing Glasses?

  • Robert S. Chambers
  • Mark E. Stavig
  • Rajan Tandon
Part of the Conference Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Mechanics Series book series (CPSEMS)

Abstract

Glass forming materials like polymers exhibit a variety of complex, nonlinear, time-dependent relaxations in volume, enthalpy and stress, all of which affect material performance and aging. Durable product designs rely on the capability to predict accurately how these materials will respond to mechanical loading and temperature regimes over prolonged exposures to operating environments. This cannot be achieved by developing a constitutive framework to fit only one or two types of experiments. Rather, it requires a constitutive formalism that is quantitatively predictive to engineering accuracy for the broad range of observed relaxation behaviors. Moreover, all engineering analyses must be performed from a single set of material model parameters. The rigorous nonlinear viscoelastic Potential Energy Clock (PEC) model and its engineering phenomenological equivalent, the Simplified Potential Energy Clock (SPEC) model, were developed to fulfill such roles and have been applied successfully to thermoplastics and filled and unfilled thermosets. Recent work has provided an opportunity to assess the performance of the SPEC model in predicting the viscoelastic behavior of an inorganic sealing glass. This presentation will overview the history of PEC and SPEC and describe the material characterization, model calibration and validation associated with the high Tg (~460 °C) sealing glass.

Keywords

Nonlinear Viscoelasticity Polymers Modeling Glasses 

Notes

Acknowledgements

Sandia National Laboratories is a multi-program laboratory managed and operated by Sandia Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Lockheed Martin Corporation, for the U.S. Department of Energy’s National Nuclear Security Administration under contract DE-AC04-94AL85000. Special thanks are offered to Nicholas B. Wyatt for measuring the stress-strain curves and collecting other data characterizing the Epon 828/D230 alumina-filled epoxy.

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Copyright information

© The Society for Experimental Mechanics, Inc. 2016

Authors and Affiliations

  • Robert S. Chambers
    • 1
  • Mark E. Stavig
    • 1
  • Rajan Tandon
    • 1
  1. 1.Sandia National LaboratoriesAlbuquerqueUSA

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