Journal of Materials Science, Vol.35, No.24, 6111-6121, 2000
Influence of molecular weight on the mechanical performance of a thermoplastic glassy polyimide
Mechanical testing of an advanced thermoplastic polyimide (LaRC(TM)-SI) with known variations in molecular weight was performed over a range of temperatures below the glass transition temperature. The physical characterization, elastic properties and notched tensile strength were all determined as a function of molecular weight and test temperature. It was shown that notched tensile strength is a strong function of both temperature and molecular weight, whereas stiffness is only a strong function of temperature. A critical molecular weight (M-c) was observed to occur at a weight-average molecular weight ((M) over bar (w)) of similar to 22000 g/mol below which, the notched tensile strength decreases rapidly. This critical molecular weight transition is temperature-independent. Furthermore, inelastic analysis showed that low molecular weight materials tended to fail in a brittle manner, whereas high molecular weight materials exhibited ductile failure. The microstructural images supported these findings.