November 1, 2014
Journal Article

Measuring time-dependent diffusion in polymer matrix composites

Abstract

Moisture plays a significant role in influencing the mechanical behavior and long-term durability of polymer matrix composites (PMC’s). The common methods used to determine the moisture diffusion coefficients of PMCs are based on the solution of Fickian diffusion in the one-dimensional domain. Fick’s Law assumes that equilibrium between the material surface and the external vapor is established instantaneously. A time dependent boundary condition has been shown to improve correlation with some bulk diffusion measurements, but has not been validated experimentally. The surface moisture content in a Toray 800S/3900-2B toughened quasi-isotropic laminate system, [0/±60]s, was analyzed experimentally using Nuclear Reaction Analysis (NRA). It was found that the surface moisture content showed a rapid increase to an intermediate concentration C0, followed by a slow linear increase to the saturation level.

Revised: June 26, 2015 | Published: November 1, 2014

Citation

Pilli S., L.V. Smith, and V. Shutthanandan. 2014. Measuring time-dependent diffusion in polymer matrix composites. Mechanics of Time-Dependent Materials 18, no. 4:633-641. PNNL-SA-87954. doi:10.1007/s11043-012-9175-z