Magazine Article

Measuring Propellant Stress Relaxation Modulus Using Dynamic Mechanical Analyzer

TBMG-27380

08/01/2017

Abstract
Content

Structural analysis of solid rocket motors is challenging for several reasons, but the most important of these is the complex behavior of the propellant. The mechanical response of a solid propellant is time and temperature dependent. The complexity of the mathematical analysis of the propellant depends on the loading conditions, but for some loading situations, the linear viscoelasticity assumption is reasonable. In particular, linear viscoelasticity is perhaps the most appropriate material behavior description for use in the simulations of stresses related to storage conditions. Typically, simulations use a viscoelastic model in the form of a Prony series and a Williams–Landel–Ferry (WLF) equation. The parameters in these models are derived from stress relaxation experiments, making the stress relaxation experiment a key viscoelastic test, analogous to the tensile test for linear elastic materials.

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Citation
"Measuring Propellant Stress Relaxation Modulus Using Dynamic Mechanical Analyzer," Mobility Engineering, August 1, 2017.
Additional Details
Publisher
Published
Aug 1, 2017
Product Code
TBMG-27380
Content Type
Magazine Article
Language
English