Abstract
The influence of loading rate on the tensile fracture of polystyrene-polyisoprenepolystyrene
(SIS) and polystyrene-poly(ethylene-co-butylene)-polystyrene (SEBS) has been
investigated. The tensile strength of SIS initially increased with increasing strain rate, eventually
reaching a plateau at elevated strain rates. In contrast, the tensile strength of SEBS was relatively
unaffected by strain rate. The fracture surfaces of the tensile test specimens were examined by
scanning electron microscopy. The fracture surface morphologies indicated that fracture initiated
via cavitation, followed subsequently by void coalescence and catastrophic fracture. For both
materials there was no qualitatively obvious change in fracture surface morphology with increasing
strain rate. The results indicate that the ultimate strength of styrenic thermoplastic elastomers is
governed by the nature of the dominant failure mechanism at the molecular scale; when chain
scission dominates, the tensile strength is independent of the strain rate, but when chain pull-out
dominates, the tensile strength increases with increasing strain rate.
Publisher
Trans Tech Publications, Ltd.