Note: the following analysis
and its write-up are property of The Madison Group and cannot
be copied and/or distributed in anyway without prior permission
from The Madison Group. This analysis in no way suggests
that any or all plastic failures occur in the manner described.
Each plastic failure is unique and should be treated as
such.
Failure Analysis Using SEM and Analytical Tools
SEM or Scanning Electron Microscopy is used to perform an in-depth
analysis of the fractured surfaces. This analysis is also known as fractography.
A fractography allows us to locate the initiation site of the crack as
well as details about how the crack propagated during failure.
The crack's initiation site is an important step in determining the
root cause of failure, such as:
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high-stress region or at a stress concentration point
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presence of impurities, air entrapment or voids caused during manufacturing
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presence of a knit-line or weld line
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indication the plastic was is contact with a chemical or foreign substance
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indication of environmental stress cracking (ESC) where chemical solvation
is combined with stress loading (stress can be external or internal from
residual stress)
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evidence of fiber breakage or poor bonding between fibers and matrix
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absence of fibers
Analyzing how the crack propagated during failure can help define the mode
of failure, such as:
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brittle or ductile failures
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fast or slow crack growth
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identification of crack growth direction
fatigue cracking
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Case study: Failure of Polycarbonate (PC) Threaded Bottle
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Figure 1: PC bottle threaded region (10x)
Figure 2: SEM of threaded region (50x)
Figure 3: SEM of threaded region (mid section at 900x)
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PC bottle
Fractography Analysis
The first picture is a cross-section view of the bottle's
threaded region taken in an optical stereomicroscope at
a 10x magnification. The failed surface is gold sputter
coated to increase the resolution of the fractography under
the SEM. Figure 2 is at a 50x magnification taken under
the SEM. Here multiple crack origins are observed along
the inner diameter of the threads. The material exhibits
smooth features typical of brittle fracture. Within the
mid-wall there is a significant amount of secondary cracking.
At high magnification (Figure 3, 900x) the crack surfaces
show a significant degree of wrinkles. These wrinkles are
the result of absorption or solvation of constituents from
the bottle's fluid into the part. The fractography analysis
concluded that the fracture is characteristic of environmental
stress cracking (ESC). ESC is a phenomenon caused by the
combination of stress and a chemical substance. The extensive
secondary cracking and the evidence of chemical absorption
suggest that some of the ingredients in the fluid may be
inherently aggressive to PC. Contributing factors to failure
are the inherent stress concentration regions at the root
of the threads. The grade of PC influences how resistant
the plastic is against chemical substances. A PC with a
higher melt flow rate is more susceptible to chemical absorption
than one with lower melt flow rate. The reason is that a
lower melt flow rate plastic has a higher molecular weight
and longer molecular chains. Longer chains do not allow
chemicals to solvate into the plastic as easy as shorter
chains. |
Analytical Analysis - Thermomechanical Analysis (TMA)
TMA tests were conducted to determine the level of molded-in stress
in the threaded region. It was believed that an important cause of stress
at the threaded region were molded-in stresses produced during manufacturing.
TMA measures dimensional change as a function of temperature. High levels
of stress can appear in the form of an anomalous expansion and contraction
of the material about the glass transition temperature. The threaded regions
were heated from room temperature to 165C. The samples showed a contraction
onset near the glass transition temperature with a secondary expansion
before the final contraction. This secondary expansion is evidence of a
mild level of molded-in stress, however the level is not sufficient to
be a major contributing factor in the observed failures. This suggests
that some combination of the chemicals and tightening stresses are the
more important factors that give rise to the cracking in the threaded region
of the parts. |
Thermomechanical Analysis (TMA) results
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Material Substitution
It is frequent when material grades are substituted during production.
The designer specifies a low melt flow material, but the molder uses a
higher melt flow grade. A possible reason is that the molder is trying
to reduce costs by using a high melt flow grade that is faster to mold.
While the molder is reducing cycle time they are reducing the cost of each
part. At the same time, even though the part is still made out of PC, the
PC grade is of lower quality and it is more susceptible to ESC, chemical
attack and has lower impact properties. This trend of changing material
grade during molding is becoming more of a factor, specially with the recent
trend of outsourcing. Material substitution is also a factor especially
when parts are molded overseas where material quality may vary from the
original material specified during part design.
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