Journal of Rheology, Vol.51, No.3, 517-540, 2007
Potential energy clock model: Justification and challenging predictions
A recent, nonlinear viscoelastic theory for predicting the thermomechanical response of glassy polymers has been shown to predict behaviors from enthalpy relaxation to temperature-dependent mechanical yield in various modes of deformation quite well. The foundation of this theory rests on a "material clock" that depends on the potential energy of the system. The molecular basis for the clock and the Rational Mechanics framework for the constitutive equation are briefly reviewed. The theory is then used to predict and explain much more complicated behavior of glassy polymers: the change in compressive yield stress during physical aging at different temperatures, the peculiar enthalpic response of glassy polymers previously compressed to different strains, "volumetric implosion" on samples subjected to tensile strains, and the dependence of the shift factor on aging time and applied stress. (c) 2007 The Society of Rheology.