Artículos de revistas
Considerations for the design of polymeric biodegradable products
Fecha
2013Registro en:
Journal of Polymer Engineering, Berlin, v. 33, n. 4, p. 293-302, 2013
2191-0340
Autor
Vieira, André Ferreira Costa
Guedes, Rui Miranda
Tita, Volnei
Institución
Resumen
Several biodegradable polymers are used in
many products with short life cycles. The performance of
a product is mostly conditioned by the materials selection
and dimensioning. Strength, maximum strain and toughness
will decrease along its degradation, and it should
be enough for the predicted use. Biodegradable plastics
can present short-term performances similar to conventional
plastics. However, the mechanical behavior of biodegradable
materials, along the degradation time, is still
an unexplored subject. The maximum strength failure
criteria, as a function of degradation time, have traditionally
been modeled according to first order kinetics. In
this work, hyperelastic constitutive models are discussed.
An example of these is shown for a blend composed of
poly(L-lactide) acid (PLLA) and polycaprolactone (PCL).
A numerical approach using ABAQUS is presented, which
can be extended to other 3D geometries. Thus, the material
properties of the model proposed are automatically
updated in correspondence to the degradation time, by
means of a user material subroutine. The parameterization
was achieved by fitting the theoretical curves with
the experimental data of tensile tests made on a PLLA-PCL
blend (90:10) for different degradation times. The results
obtained by numerical simulations are compared to
experimental data, showing a good correlation between
both results.