JOURNAL OF TEXTILE RESEARCH ›› 2007, Vol. 28 ›› Issue (6): 40-44.

• 纺织工程 • Previous Articles     Next Articles

Stress relaxation properties of yarns

SONG Jiangchao;LIANG Fangge;SHI Fengjun   

  1. 1.School of Material Engineering;Soochow University;Suzhou;Jiangsu 215021;China;2.College of Textile;Donghua University;Shanghai 201620;China;3.Textile Engineering and Technology Research Center;Zhongyuan Institute of Technology;Zhengzhou;Henan 450007;China
  • Received:2006-01-18 Revised:2006-12-20 Online:2007-06-15 Published:2007-06-15

Abstract: The stress relaxation properties of yarns are studied.Based on the superposition principle of Boltzman,the elongation-stress relaxation process of yarns is analyzed using the standard linear solid model.Theoretical equations of the elongation-stress relaxation process are deduced.The elongation-stress relaxation experiments of polyester/rayon and regenerated bamboo fiber/cotton blended yarns are performed under such conditions as constant stress and different elongation rates and constant elongation rate and different stresses.The regressive equations of stress relaxation and correlation coefficients of the yarns are calculated.Theoretical expectations display very good agreement with the experiment observations.It indicates that the standard linear solid model can be used to describe the stress relaxation properties of yarns under lower strain conditions.It is found from the experimental and theoretical results that the higher the strain or the elongation rate,the lower the relaxation time and more apparent the relaxation phenomenon.

No related articles found!
Viewed
Full text
527
HTML PDF
Just accepted Online first Issue Just accepted Online first Issue
0 0 1 0 0 526

  From Others local
  Times 424 103
  Rate 80% 20%

Abstract
1077
Just accepted Online first Issue
0 0 1077
  From Others local
  Times 977 100
  Rate 91% 9%

Cited

Web of Science  Crossref   ScienceDirect  Search for Citations in Google Scholar >>
 
This page requires you have already subscribed to WoS.
  Shared   
  Discussed   
No Suggested Reading articles found!