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Predictive models of poly(ethylene-terephthalate) film degradation under multi-factor accelerated weathering exposures
Author(s) -
Abdülkerim Gök,
David Ngendahimana,
Cara L. Fagerholm,
Roger H. French,
Jiayang Sun,
Laura S. Bruckman
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
plos one
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.99
H-Index - 332
ISSN - 1932-6203
DOI - 10.1371/journal.pone.0177614
Subject(s) - haze , biological system , materials science , homogeneity (statistics) , degradation (telecommunications) , predictive power , ethylene , residual , environmental science , linear regression , humidity , chemistry , chemical engineering , statistics , mathematics , computer science , thermodynamics , physics , algorithm , organic chemistry , telecommunications , quantum mechanics , engineering , biology , catalysis
Accelerated weathering exposures were performed on poly(ethylene-terephthalate) (PET) films. Longitudinal multi-level predictive models as a function of PET grades and exposure types were developed for the change in yellowness index (YI) and haze (%). Exposures with similar change in YI were modeled using a linear fixed-effects modeling approach. Due to the complex nature of haze formation, measurement uncertainty, and the differences in the samples’ responses, the change in haze (%) depended on individual samples’ responses and a linear mixed-effects modeling approach was used. When compared to fixed-effects models, the addition of random effects in the haze formation models significantly increased the variance explained. For both modeling approaches, diagnostic plots confirmed independence and homogeneity with normally distributed residual errors. Predictive R 2 values for true prediction error and predictive power of the models demonstrated that the models were not subject to over-fitting. These models enable prediction under pre-defined exposure conditions for a given exposure time (or photo-dosage in case of UV light exposure). PET degradation under cyclic exposures combining UV light and condensing humidity is caused by photolytic and hydrolytic mechanisms causing yellowing and haze formation. Quantitative knowledge of these degradation pathways enable cross-correlation of these lab-based exposures with real-world conditions for service life prediction.

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