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Characterization of Fiber Orientation and Weld Line Effects in Reinforced Plastics with Reduced CO2eq Emissions

With increasing emphasis and regulations on the environmental footprint in industries, the integration of reduced carbon dioxide equivalent (CO2eq) plastic materials is desirable. Fiber-reinforced plastic materials mechanical properties differ with varying fiber orientations. Similarly, the welding line phenomenon, commonly present in more complex injection molded parts, decreases the mechanical performance. This thesis aims to experimentally investigate tensile behavior on reduced CO2eq reinforced plastics in different fiber orientations and weld line configurations.  Ten materials with reduced CO2eq are investigated, the types of materials are as follows: PA6 (Polyamide6), PP (Polypropylene), and PA6/PP blend materials. Both short fiber-reinforced polymers (SFRP) and long fiber-reinforced polymers (LFRP) are investigated. The screening resulted in three selected materials for further investigation: one recycled PA6, one bio-based PA6/PP, and one alternative PP. The further investigation involves tensile testing in the five directions and three weld line configurations with non-standardized geometry specimens punched out from an injection molded plate with controlled fiber orientation. Two types of uniform fiber orientation plates are manufactured for the testing conditions, one with holes for weld line testing and one without for testing of orientation. The evaluated fiber orientations are 0° (fibers parallel to load direction), 22.5°, 45°, 67.5°, and 90° (fibers transverse to load direction). The weld line configuration consists of three consecutive holes with 96.5, 146.5, and 196.5 mm distances from the gating system. Three weld line test specimens are generated from each plate, they are denoted W1, W2, and W3 from their respective distance from the gating system, with W1 being closest to the gate. Optical microscopy of fiber orientation and failure modes for the test specimens are performed to investigate and validate the testing conditions.  Varying fiber orientation was found to greatly affect the stress-strain behavior in all four materials investigated. The tensile strength was reduced from longitudinal to transverse fiber orientation, with the most significant reduction near flow direction. High variations were present for the brittle materials supposedly from their weakness to stress concentrations. Strain tended to increase from the lowest at 0° to the maximum at 45°, from which it again decreased to a mid-value at 90° for all materials. The weld line strength reduced significantly for the brittle materials, whereas the ductile materials experienced a much smaller reduction. The three weld line cases failed at similar stresses, while having different stiffness.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:UPSALLA1/oai:DiVA.org:hj-58345
Date January 2022
CreatorsTolf, Anders, Johannesson, Markus
PublisherJönköping University, JTH, Material och tillverkning
Source SetsDiVA Archive at Upsalla University
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeStudent thesis, info:eu-repo/semantics/bachelorThesis, text
Formatapplication/pdf
Rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

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