Viscoelastic Characterization of a Nonlinear Fiber-Reinforced Plastic

Abstract
The nonlinear, viscoelastic behavior of a unidirectional, glass fiber-epoxy composite material is characterized by using isothermal, uniaxial creep and recovery tests together with a constitutive equation based on thermodynamic theory. The nonlinear constitutive equation for uniaxial loading is described first, and then fourth-order tensor transformations relating principal linear viscoelastic creep compli ances, uniaxial creep compliance, and fiber angle are summarized. Following a discussion of experimental aspects, creep and recovery data obtained from several different specimens (each having a differ ent fiber orientation relative to the loading axis) are reduced using a graphical shifting procedure and tensor transformations to evaluate all material properties, including the principal creep compliances. As a check on the constitutive theory, the data are shown to be in ternally consistent. Some simplicity in the analytical representation of the data is found; viz. the nonlinear, uniaxial creep compliance obeys a power law in time with the exponent being independent of fiber orientation and stress level, and the nonlinear material proper ties depend mainly on the average octahedral shear stress in the matrix.