Mechanical properties of injection‐molded short‐fiber thermoplastic composites. Part 1: The elastic moduli and strengths of glass‐filled poly(butylene terephthalate)

The effects of processing and part geometry on the local mechanical properties of injection-molded, 30 wt% short-fiber-reinforced filled poly(butylene terephthalate) (PBT) are characterized by mechanical tests on specimens cut from rectangular plaques of different thicknesses injection molded at several different processing conditions. Stiffness data from tensile tests at 12.7-mm intervals on 12.7-mm-wide strips cut from injection-molded plaques—both along the flow and cross-flow directions—and flexural tests on these strips show consistency of plaque-to-plaque local properties. Also, in addition to the well-known anisotropic properties caused by flow-induced fiber orientation, injection-molded short fiber composites exhibit in-plane and through-thickness nonhomogeneity—as indicated by in-plane property variations, by differences between tensile and flexural properties, and by the flexural strength being significantly higher than the tensile strength. The sensitivity of these mechanical properties to process conditions and plaque geometry have also been determined: the flow-direction tensile modulus increases with fill time, the differences between flow and cross-flow properties decrease with increasing thickness, and both the flow and cross-flow flexural moduli decrease with increasing plaque thickness. While the flexural modulus is comparable to the tensile modulus, the flexural strength is significantly higher than the tensile strength. POLYM. COMPOS., 26:428–447, 2005. © 2005 Society of Plastics Engineers