SOLID
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Bye to all,
would you tell me where I can find the stress-deformation curves for an abs and a homopolymer pom?
would you tell me where I can find the stress-deformation curves for an abs and a homopolymer pom?
palstic materials are so widely variable that I think the only one is to ask the manufacturer with reference to the specific product.Bye to all,
would you tell me where I can find the stress-deformation curves for an abs and a homopolymer pom?
Hello hunterbut you don't know what percentage these components are, so it's hard to give general info.
thank you for the aminati answer,for materials according to specific technical standards (typically steels and metal materials in general) the reference technical standards report the mechanical characteristics at temperature for the field of interest.
I think the curves are paid by ideas.com? ? ?hi to everyone is the first time I write on this forum!!!
solid, I hope you've already solved your problem, but if you don't, you can take a look at it. www.ides.com Find a lot of data on plastics and I also feel like traction curves.
I fully share that said as a hunter. ask the manufacturer the curves related to the maternal.Hello hunter
the most relevant characteristics regarding these materials are
abs (reinforced in fiberglass)
- Volume mass: 1.02-1.05 g/cm^3
- rupture rate extension: 11%
- breaking load: 42 n/mm
-module elastic (23°c): 2050 n/mm^2
pom (omopolymer)
- Volume mass: 1.40 g/cm^3
- rupture rate extension: 45%
- breaking load: 71 n/mm
-module elastic (23°c): 3250 n/mm^2
These materials have the characteristic of having a non-linear elastic curve, so having only the elastic module at the beginning of the curve is not very helpful.
As for the percentage of the various components I do not know, I have only the physical and mechanical properties available.
Unfortunately not yet...solid, I hope you've already solved your problem
I also shot other sites (campusplasts, matweb, etc...) but I can't find the curves if I don't pay.but if it weren't you can take a look at www.ides.com Find a lot of data on plastics and I also feel like traction curves.
done, but I still have no answer.I fully share that said as a hunter. ask the manufacturer the curves related to the maternal.
of course and beyond the porosity there are also other equally important ones (resistance to chemical agents, aging to atmospheric agents, resistance to light, temperature of softening, specific heat, thermal conductivity, color, gloss etc etc.) but that for the study that I have to conduct are not data of interest.I would say that among the important data, when talking about plastics, there is also water absorption.
volumical mass is a synonym for density, although technical regulations generally make use of the first term.p.s. is it possible to call the bulk mass with the simplest, and perhaps even more correct, term of density? Excuse the pedanteria :biggrin: