Beschreibung:
AbstractThe technology of using glass fibers to increase the modulus and the strength of polymeric systems is well‐developed. Much less widely exploited has been the enhancement of properties by orienting the molecules of the polymer itself. The purpose here was to look for a synergistic combination of these two strategies: using glass fiber‐filled polystyrene and introducing molecular orientation into the polystyrene matrix. For rheological reasons it is not possible to introduce large stretch ratios in the rubbery state and thus the amount of molecular orientation that can be frozen into the quenched glassy composite is small. Even so, however, the rubbery elongation (which we associate with subsequent molecular orientation) has a very significant effect on the final (room temperature) mechanical properties. Analysis of these properties was made in terms of various theoretical models (those of Brody and Ward, Smallwood‐Guth, and Russel and Acrivos for the Young's modulus; and that of Kelly and Tyson, as modified by Lees, for the tensile strength). These comparisons showed that the brittleness of unoriented polystyrene is such that the matrix does not effectively distribute the stress along the length of the fiber and thus the benefit of the length is not realized; whereas the higher ductility of oriented polystyrene allows such transfer and a consequent improvement of properties.