4.7 Article

Influence on Elastic Wave Propagation Behavior in Polymers Composites: An Analysis of Inflection Phenomena

Journal

POLYMERS
Volume 15, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/polym15071680

Keywords

particle polymer composites; elastic wave; wave attenuation; wavefront

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This study investigates the elastic wave propagation behavior of a Cu/poly (methyl methacrylate) composite with different particle contents and sizes. The results show that the elastic wave velocity and attenuation coefficient exhibit an inflection point with increasing volume content. Additionally, the interaction between particles intensifies and then reduces with increasing particle content, affecting the propagation behavior of elastic waves.
Particulate polymer composites (PPCs) are widely applied under different elastic wave loading conditions in the automobile, aviation, and armor protection industries. This study investigates the elastic wave propagation behavior of a typical PPC, specifically a Cu/poly (methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) composite, with a wide range of particle contents (30-65 vol. %) and particle sizes (1-100 mu m). The results demonstrate an inflection phenomenon in both the elastic wave velocity and attenuation coefficient with increasing volume content. In addition, the inflection point moves to the direction of low content with the increase in particle size. Notably, the elastic wave velocity, attenuation, and wavefront width significantly increased with the particle size. The inflection phenomenon of elastic wave propagation behavior in PPCs is demonstrated to have resulted from particle interaction using the classical scattering theory and finite element analysis. The particle interaction initially intensified and then reduced with increasing particle content. This study elucidates the underlying mechanism governing the elastic wave propagation behavior of high particle content PPCs and provides guidelines for the design and application of wave-absorbing composites.

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