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A theory of crack healing in polymers is presented in terms of the stages of crack healing, namely, (a) surface rearrangement, (b) surface approach, (c) wetting, (d) diffusion, and (e) randomization. The recovery ratio R of mechanical properties with time was determined as a convolution product, R = Rh (t)*φ(t), where Rh (t) is an intrinsic healing function, and φ(t) is a wetting distribution function for the crack interface or plane in the material. The reptation model of a chain in a tube was used to describe self-diffusion of interpenetrating random coil chains which formed a basis for Rh (t). Applications of the theory are described, including crack healing in amorphous polymers and melt processing of polymer resins by injection or compression molding. Relations are developed for fracture stress σ, strain ε, and energy E as a function of time t, temperature T, pressure P, and molecular weight M. Results include (i) during healing or processing at tt∞, σ,ε∼t1/4, E∼t1/2; (ii) at constant tt∞, σ,ε∼M−1/4, E∼M−1/2; (iii) in the fully interpenetrated healed state at t = t∞, σ,ε∼M1/2, E∼M; (iv) the time to achieve complete healing, t∞ ∼M3, ∼exp P, ∼exp 1/T. Chain fracture, creep, and stress relaxation are also discussed. New concepts for strength predictions are introduced.
Wool et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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