A Methodology for Characterization of the Strain Rate-Dependent Behavior of PU Foam
Author(s) -
N. D. Shivakumar,
Anindya Deb,
Clifford C. Chou,
H. C. Chittappa
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
sae international journal of materials and manufacturing
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.203
H-Index - 20
eISSN - 1946-3987
pISSN - 1946-3979
DOI - 10.4271/2014-01-0539
Subject(s) - strain rate , materials science , strain (injury) , stress (linguistics) , characterization (materials science) , range (aeronautics) , logarithm , drop test , composite material , strain energy density function , metal foam , structural engineering , finite element method , mathematics , engineering , nanotechnology , medicine , mathematical analysis , aluminium , linguistics , philosophy
Polymeric foams are known to be sensitive to strain rate under dynamic loads. Mechanical characterization of such materials would not thus be complete without capturing the effect of strain rate on their stress-strain behaviors. Consistent data on the dynamic behavior of foam is also necessary for designing energy-absorbing countermeasures based on foam such as for vehicle occupant safety protection. Strain rates of the order of 100-500 s−1 are quite common in such design applications; strain rates of this range cannot be obtained with an ordinary UTM (universal testing machine) and a special test set-up is usually needed. In the current study, a unique approach has been suggested according to which quasi-static tests at low strain rates and low velocity drop tests at medium strain rates are utilized to arrive at an empirical relation between initial peak stress and logarithm of strain rate for a rigid closed-cell PU foam. Using a stress-scaling methodology and the empirical relation mentioned, foam stress-strain curves are obtained for a number of strain rates spanning low (from 0.00033 s−1) to high strain rates (up to1000 s−1). This data on foam material behavior is expected to be particularly useful in numerical modelling of foam-based countermeasures for impact energy absorption applications
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