1998
DOI: 10.1080/00218469808009963
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Lap Shear Adhesion of Styrenic Triblock Copolymers to Polypropylene and Polystyrene

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Cited by 2 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Recently, McGraw et al [21] have performed crazing measurements to probe the interdiffusion between two thin films of entangled polymers and showed that it takes less than one bulk reptation time to observe the structural characteristics of bulk crazes at the interface. Similar conclusions about the recovery of interfacial strength have been obtained from lap-joint shear tests [22][23][24][25]. These studies determined the ultimate shear stress at failure and correlated it with interdiffusion time.…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
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“…Recently, McGraw et al [21] have performed crazing measurements to probe the interdiffusion between two thin films of entangled polymers and showed that it takes less than one bulk reptation time to observe the structural characteristics of bulk crazes at the interface. Similar conclusions about the recovery of interfacial strength have been obtained from lap-joint shear tests [22][23][24][25]. These studies determined the ultimate shear stress at failure and correlated it with interdiffusion time.…”
supporting
confidence: 67%
“…As in previous simulations [32], we determined the interfacial strength using a shear test that is similar to a lap-joint shear experiment [22][23][24][25]. To focus on a region of width H near the interface, atoms in top (z > H/2) and bottom (z < −H/2) layers were held rigid and displaced at constant velocity in opposite directions in the xy−plane.…”
Section: Interface Simulationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…In recent work, we have used simulations to follow the evolution of the shear strength of interfaces between miscible and immiscible polymers . The maximum shear stress before failure σ max was evaluated using a geometry that mimics a lap-joint shear experiment. As in experiments, we found that σ max rose with welding time t as t 1/4 and saturated long before polymers had diffused by their radius of gyration. In contrast to experiments, simulations allowed direct observations of the evolution of topological constraints (TCs) associated with entanglements.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 86%