Kompozity, inženýring

Beton–polymerové kompozity: Terminologie a definice

Beton–polymerové kompozity: Terminologie a definice

Již před delší dobou vypracoval tým předních světových odborníků terminologii a definice základních pojmů v oblasti kompozitních materiálů, typu betonu  s polymery. I když jde pouze o menší část kompozitních materiálů, většina uvedených pojmů je platná obecně a bylo by patrně prospěšné a pro širší porozumění užitečné tuto terminologii důsledně dodržovat. Česká verze bude proto v brzké době následovat originální verzi jedné ze zpráv komise TC 105 CPC – RILEM, dále uvedenou:

 

Reunion Internationale des Laboratories d'Essais et
de Recherches sur les Materiaux et les Constructions

Technical Committee 105 CPC

CONCRETE POLYMER COMPOSITES

 

Committee Members:
BARES, Richard A. -Chairman
CARDON, Albert H. -ordinary member
CHANDRA, S. -ordinary member
CZARNECKI, Lech -Secretary
FIEBRICH, M. -corresponding member
FOWLER, David W. -corresponding member
HRANILOVIC, M. -ordinary member
JUSTNES, Harald -ordinary member
KOBLISCHEK, Peter J. -ordinary member
KREIS, R. -corresponding member
OHAMA, Yoshihiko -ordinary member
PATUROEV, V. V. -corresponding member
PUTERMAN, Moshe -corresponding member
SANDROLINI, Franco -ordinary member
SARVARANTA, Leena -corresponding member
SASSE, H. R. -corresponding member
SCHORN, H. -ordinary member
SHUTOV, F. A. -ordinary member
STAYNES, B. W. -corresponding member.
STEIJAERT, P. D. -ordinary member
VAN GEMERT, D. -ordinary member

 

TERMINOLOGY AND DEFINITIONS

INTRODUCTION

The book is the result of lots of working sessions, warm argues and discussions and some time even quarrels of twenty five specialists from around the world universities and research centres -from seventeen countries- gathered together in RILEM Technical Committee TC 105 CPC "Concrete Polymer Composites".

For this reason, the book is not just another set of selected terms in the field of materials. After five years of hard work together it has been found a common language for communication, which can be profitably shared with all members of the world community, interested in composites. There is not only the lexicon but also evidence of the way of a thinking of polymer composite materials and meanings. To some extent, the book itself is also an image of the main categories in composites science, viz. Structure, Interaction and Synergy. The lexicon contains more than 400 entries. Separately each of those could be described in various ways. For the purpose of this book, the terms have been defined in particular meaning to establish uniform interdisciplinary system of Concrete - Polymer Composites.

It is hoped that the lexicon users share the opinion that this "whole is something more than just the sum up of singularities". This Aristotele's dictum (350 RC.) can be treated as the first definition of composite materials.

ABRASION
The wearing a way of a part of material by rubbing or grinding against another surface

ABSORPTION, WATER (MOISTURE)
The ability of a material to absorb and retain water, expressed by the amount of relative mass increase

ACCELERATOR
A compound added to a mixture in order to in crease the rate of a reaction (cement hydration, polymerization, etc.)

ACTIVATOR
A compounding material used   in   small   proportions   to   increase the        effectiveness  of  an   accelerator   or   to   start   the   decomposition of an initiator

ADDITIVE
A  compound  added  in  small  amounts  (usually  <5%  of  binder  weight) to   a    mixture    in   order    to    enhance    or   suppress    a   certain  property of the mixture

ADHESION
The   attraction    between    two  solid  materials    in  intimate    contact    due to interaction of surface molecules

ADMIXTURE
A compound added to a mixture in order to modify properties and/or reduce material costs

AFTER CURE
A progress of curing a composite material produced from thermosetting resin or rubber, stopping treatment

AGENT, ANTIFOAMING (ANTIFOAMER), DEFOAMING
A  substance  added  to  a material  or  composition  to  control  the  content of gases or prevent foaming, or break down the foam formed

AGENT, ANTISTATIC
A chemical used by compounding in a material or for coating of the product, having the effect of decreasing the surface resistivity to avoid generation
of static electricity on the surface and thereby attraction of dust

AGENT, BLOWING
A compounding material used to produce gas by chemical or thermal action, or both, in manufacture of hollow or cellular articles

AGENT,  COUPLING
A functional monomer in a polymer composite acting as a chemical "bridge" between the polymer phase and the inorganic phase(s)

AGENT,  CROSS-LINKING
A substance  which  reacts with  the  oligomer  or  linear  polymer  to  form chemical bonds between polymer chains

AGENT, CURING
see HARDENER

AGENT, DEFOAMING
see ANTIFOAMER

AGENT, DISPERSING
A surface-active substance used to facilitate the suspension of solid compounding materials in a liquid medium and to stabilize the dispersion thereby produced

AGENT, EMULSIFYING
A surface-active substance used to facilitate the dispersion of an immiscible liquid compounding material in another liquid and to stabilize the emulsion thereby produced

AGENT, FOAMING
See AGENT,BLOWING

AGENT, REINFORCING
A compound,  not   basically   involved   in   the   hardening   process,   used to increase the resistance of the material to mechanical forces

AGENT, RELEASE (AGENT, MOLD RELEASE)
A substance (external mold release agent) coated or baked on an interior mold  surface,  or   a   substance   (internal   mold   release   agent)   added to a compound to facilitate  the  removal  of  the  molded  product  from the mold

AGENT, WETTING  (IN MIX)
A substance used to reduce the surface tension of a mix and thereby facilitate spreading or impregnation of a surface by the mix

AGGLOMERATE

  1. A material  artificially  built  up  from  particles  of  parts  bonded  together by binder
  2. A    cluster    of    particles    of    one    or    more    compounding    materials in a composite contained in a continuous phase (matrix)

AGGLOMERATE, LATEX
A cluster of polymer or rubber particles in a colloidal aqueous suspension of such particles

AGGLOMERATE (OF LATEX)
Reversible or irreversible joining together of latex particles

AGGREGATE
A  particular  material  such  as  natural  sand,  manufactured  sand,  gravel, crushed gravel, blast furnace slag, or others

AGGREGATE, BINARY
An aggregate with particles of two sizes

AGGREGATE, COARSE
An aggregate retained in a portion of 85% or more by weight on the 5-mm rectangular wire sieve

AGGREGATE,  CONTINUOUS
A  mixture  of  n  particle  types  of  different  size  represented  in  the  mix in accordance with a continuous grading curve

AGGREGATE,  DISCONTINUOUS
A  mixture  of  n  particle  types  of  different  size  represented  in  the  IIllX in accordance with a gap grading curve (discontinuous grading curve)

AGGREGATE,  FINE
An aggregate  entirely  passing  through  the  10-mm wire  sieve  and  85% or more by weight passing through the 5-mm rectangular wire sieve

AGGREGATE,  MONOTONOUS
An aggregate with all particles of the same size

AGGREGATE, TERNARY
An aggregate with particles of three sizes

AGING
The  result  of  internal  chemical  and  physical   changes  of  material  under general loading during an interval of time

AGING (PROCESS)
Irreversible  change  of  material  properties  during  exposure  to  a general loading (mechanical, environmental, etc.) for an interval of time

AGING, ACT OF
Exposure of materials to an environment for an interval of time

AGING, SHELF
Aging during storage

ANALYSIS, SIEVE
The test for determining the particle size of a granular or powdery material by the use of sieves

ANISOTROPY, MATERIAL
Different values of physical properties in different directions of a material

ANNEALING
Heating  to  and  holding  at  a  suitable  temperature  and  then   cooling at a suitable rate for relieving the strain caused in the  product  by  heat or chemical stress

BATCH (MATERIAL COMPOUND)
The product of one mixing operation

BINDER
A geometrically continuous solid phase of a composite material

BINDER, CONTENT OF
The ratio of the amount (in weight or volume %) of the binder to the total amount of the materials used in a composite material
Note:  The  binder  content  should  be  based  on volume  percentage if possible

BINDER, FILLED
Particular composites of the First Type

BLEEDING
Migration of constituents of a binder to the surface
 
BLISTER
A cavity or sac that deforms the surface of the material  by  the pressure of fluid contained therein

BLOOMING (OF MATERIAL)
The efflorescence of a liquid or solid on the surface of a material

BLOW (OF CELLULAR MATERIAL)
The volume expansion during the production of expanded material

BODY
A geometrically limited continuum in space with specific boundaries

BOUNDARY, PHASE
The surface in which one phase is in contact with another

BREAKDOWN, FATIGUE
Deterioration of a test piece or product resulting from cyclic deformation

BULK, SOLID PHASE
Solid    phase    filling    a    certain    volume    of    space    not    characterized by its geometrical form

CATALYST
A compound added to a mixture in order to increase the rate of a reaction (cement  hydration,  polymerization,   etc.)  without   being   consumed   itself by the chemical reaction

CELL
see PORE

CELL, CLOSE
see PORE, CLOSE

CELL, OPEN
see PORE, OPEN

CEMENT

  1. A dry powder from silica, alumina, lime, iron-oxide and magnesia, combined together to form hydraulic compounds which form a hardened paste when mixed with water; it is used as a binder for aggregate
  2. A material which glues individual bodies together

COAGULATION

  1. Irreversible agglomeration of particles dispersed in a latex (polymer dispersion)
  2. Irreversible agglomeration of colloidal particles precipitated (originally dispersed) in a colloidal solution (by addition of an electrolyte or by heating or cooling)

COEFFICIENT OF THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY
The ratio of the amount of  heat  flow per  unit  time through  a unit  area of the isothermal plane, perpendicular to the direction  of  the  heat  flow, to the thermal gradient in this direction, expressed in Wm-1K-1

COEFFICIENT OF THERMAL EXPANSION, LINEAR
The value of relative change of length of a material  by  heat,  expressed per one degree change in temperature

COEFFICIENT OF THERMAL EXPANSION, VOLUME
The value of relative change of a material volume by heat, expressed per one degree change in temperature

COEFFICIENT, VISCOSITY
The  shearing  stress  necessary  to  induce  a  unit  velocity  flow  gradient in a material

COHESION
The interaction among molecules, atoms  or  ions within  a solid  material or between two different solid materials being in intimate contact that keeps the continuum together

COLLOID
A mixture of which at least one component is subdivided physically in such a way that one or more of its dimensions lies in the range between approximately a nanometer and a micrometer

CO MONOMER
One of the two or more monomer species that polymerize to form a polymer

COMPATIBILITY
A property such that two or more kinds of materials have affinity with one another to form a solution or mixture

COMPOSITE
see MATERIAL, COMPOSITE

COMPOSITES, CONCRETE-POLYMER (C-PC)
A particular or hybrid composite of the type of concrete using polymers

COMPOUND
An  intimate  mixture  of  polymer(s)  with  all  the  substances  necessary for the final material

CONCRETE  (MORTAR)
A granular composite material that is made by mixing a cement binder with sized aggregates

CONCRETE, FIBER REINFORCED
A concrete  (mortar) with  addition  of  short fibers  (organic  or  inorganic) for modification of mechanical and physical properties

CONCRETE, POLYMER (PC)
A composite in which aggregate (filler) is bounded by polymer

CONCRETE,  POLYMER-CEMENT  (PCC)
A  composite  where  either  a  non-reactive  polymer  (latex)  or  a  reactive monomer or oligomer (resin) is added to the fresh cement concrete mix

CONCRETE, POLYMER IMPREGNATED (PIC)
A  composite  in  which  hardened  concrete  (mortar)   is   impregnated with a reactive monomer (resin) in fluid form which 1s subsequently polymerized in situ

CONCRETE, POLYMER-MODIFIED (PMC)
A cement concrete (mortar) where  small amounts  of polymer  are added to the fresh mix in order to alter the rheology of the mix, not contributing significantly to the binder properties of the hardened composite

CONCRETE, POLYMER-SILICATE (PSC)
A concrete (mortar) in which a mixture  of water  glass and furane  resin or other resins serve as binder

CONTACT, DIRECT FORCE
The stress field of a loaded composite system in which the transmission of inner forces  between  two  adjacent  phases  is  granted  predominantly by normal stresses

CONTENT, MOISTURE
See CONTENT,WATER
 
CONTENT, POLYMER
The content of polymer in volume or mass in a composite

CONTENT, UNIT BINDER
The quantity of the binder per unit volume of freshly mixed polymer concrete  (mortar)

CONTENT, UNIT POLYMER
The quantity of total solid materials in a polymer dispersion per unit volume of freshly mixed polymer-modified concrete (mortar)

CONTENT, WATER
The amount of moisture in a material, not including water of crystallization and/or bond water, expressed as mass percentage of the oven-dried material

CONDITIONING
The process of exposing the material to environmental specific temperature and relative humidity  for  a  stipulated  period  of  time,  for  the  purpose of limiting the variation in and improving the reproducibility of test results

CONDITIONS, ENVIRONMENTAL
The aggregate of all conditions (such as contamination, temperature, humidity, radiation, magnetic and electric fields, shock, and vibration) that externally influence the performance of an item

CONDUCTION, THERMAL
The flow of heat (not by radiation or connection and without the motion of the material) in a material

CONTINUUM,  HETEROGENEOUS
A medium, the whole volume of which consists of (identical) different solid and fluid phases, in which at least the solid phases are connected by firm bonds (and such that structural defects do not harm its inherent property)

COPOLYMER
A polymer formed from two or more types of monomers or oligomers
Note: Copolymers may be classified as

  • statistical,  in which  the  chaining  of  structural  units  is  of  random character
  • blocked,    in    which    the    chaining    proceeds    by    identical    blocks of structural units
  • grafted, in which chains of another polymer join the chains of the given polymer
  • alternating  (rarely),  in  which  the  structural  units  are  alternatively repeated

COPOLYMERIZATION
The process of polymerizing two or more monomers

CRACK (CRACKING)
A gap or separation formed in a brittle or brittle-like material

CRACKING, STRESS
The stress that causes cracking in a material

CRACKING, ENVIRONMENTAL STRESS
Stress cracking accelerated by the environment

CRATER
A small, shallow surface imperfection

CREEP
Time dependent evolution of strain under constant stress state in a material

CROSS-LINK
A chemical bond bridging one polymer chain to another

CROSS-LINKING  (ACT OF)
Formation of chemical bonds between  oligomers or polymeric chains to form a  network  or  cross-linking  structure  which   is  not   reshape able   any  more by heat or pressure

CRYSTALLIZATION, POLYMER
An arrangement of previously disordered polymer segments of repeating patterns closer to geometric symmetry

CURE
An  irreversible  process  during  which   a  monomer   compound    through a change in its chemical structure (e.g. cross-linking) becomes less mobile

CURE, POST
Heat or radiation treatment, or both, to which a cured or partially cured thermosetting (plastic or rubber) composite is subjected to enhance the level of one or more properties

DECOMPOSITION, THERMAL
The decomposition of a body by heat performed by formation of simple compounds, depolymerization, or change in physical and chemical properties

DEFORMATION,  ELASTIC
That part of the total deformation which recovers instantly when the stress in removed

DEFORMATION, ELASTIC DELAYED
That part of the total deformation, which gradually recovers after instant recovery in the course of time

DEFORMATION,  PERMANENT
That part of the total deformation, which remains when the stress is removed

DEFORMATION,  PLASTIC
The deformation of a solid material caused by application of force, such that the material does not recover its original shape

DEFORMATION,  TOTAL
The deformation of a solid material caused by application of force

DEFORMATION,  VISCOUS
That part of the total deformation of a body under constant loading rising in time

DEFORMATION,  ULTIMATE
The deformation of a solid material at the time of rupture

DEGRADATION
The detrimental change in  the  chemical  structure  of  a  material,  caused by heat, light, stress, and/or environment

DEGRADATION, THERMAL
The detrimental change of properties connected with a change in chemical structure due to an increase in temperature resulting from external application or internal generation of heat

DEGASSING
Removal of air bubbles, etc., included in an unhardened mixture

DEGREE OF POLYREACTION

  1. The average number of structural units in the polymer
  2. The  degree  of  conversion  given  by  the  ratio  of  reacted   to  reactable monomer  units

DENSITY
The mass (in air) per unit volume of a material

DENSITY, APPARENT
see DENSITY, BULK

DENSITY, BULK
The mass of a porous material per unit volume  including  any pores  and air voids present

DENSITY OF PHASE DISPERSION
The   volume    of    dispersed    particles    m    a   representative    volume    unit of structural system

DENSITY, SPECIFIC (OF COMPOSITE)
The unit weight of a representative volume

DENSITY, VOLUME
See DENSITY,BULK

DEPTH,  IMPREGNATION
The distance  from  the  surface  to  the  level  at  which  minimally  half of continuous pores are saturated by impregnant

DETERIORATION
The loss of some initial material properties due to environmental exposure as a result of development of a permanent change in physical properties

DIAGRAM, STRESS-STRAIN
A diagram showing the relation of stress to strain in a material test,in which the  values  of  stresses  are  plotted  as  ordinates  and  those   of   strains as abscissas

DIAGRAM, FATIGUE (S-N DIAGRAM)
The diagram with the stress S on the ordinate and the number of cycles N on the abscissa

DIFFUSIBILITY
The ability of a material to allow the passage of mass, in the form of discrete atoms or molecules.
Compare also PERMEABILITY

DILUENTS
An agent decreasing the viscosity of the composition

DILUENTS, NON-REACTIVE
The diluents which can evaporate.

DILUENTS, REACTIVE
The    diluents    having    the    ability    to    be    chemically    incorporated in the macromolecule.

DIRECTION, CROSSWISE  (TRANSVERSE)
The direction perpendicular to the direction of a dominating length

DISPERSION, POLYMER
A  system  in  which  very  fine  particles  (of  below  1 um)  of  a  polymer are dispersed in a liquid.

DISPERSION (ACT OF)
The application of shearing forces to distribute one or more compo mding materials uniformly throughout the mass of a material continuum

DISPERSITY (OF THE SYSTEM)
The    ratio    of    the    surface    to    the    volume    of    dispersed    phase in the representative volume of the system

DURATION
see LIFE, POT

DURABILI1Y
The  ability  of  a  material  to  withstand  mechanical  and  environmental exposure during a certain time

EDGEWISE
Direction parallel to the layers of a layered product

ELASTICITY
Ability of a material to recover shape when stress is removed

ELASTOMER
A macromolecular material  that, under service conditions, returns rapidly to    approximately its initial dimensions and shape after substantial deformation by stress and release of the stress

ELONGATION
The strain of  a  material  under  tensile  stress,  expressed  by  the  ratio of the value of strain to the original length

ELONGATION, ULTIMATE
The elongation at the time of rupture

EMULSIFIER
A surfactant used to uniformly  distribute  a compound  in a liquid where it is not soluble.
see EMULSION, LATEX and SURFACTANT

EMULSION
A system in which very fine particles of a liquid or a solid are dispersed in another liquid that does not dissolve the particles

ENVIRONMENT, AMBIENT
External surrounding in which the given system exists

EROSION
Wearing  away  of  product  surfaces  by  the washing  action,  mainly  physical, of rapidly moving liquids and solid particles

EXOTHERM
The liberation or evolution of heat during the curing of a plastic product

EXTENDER
A material used to augment the binder in a compound. see ADMIXTURE

FACTOR, BULK
The  quotient  of  density  of  the  material   in  its  processed   form,  divided by its apparent density in the unprocessed  form

FAILURE, COHESIVE (OF BONDED ASSEMBLY)
A    rupture    occurring    entirely    within    any    single    uniform    element of the assembly

FATIGUE
A phenomenon in which a material subjected to fluctuating stresses exhibits a lower strength than when subjected to a constant stress.
see DIAGRAM FATIGUE, LIFE FATIGUE and LIMIT FATIGUE

FATIGUE, DYNAMIC
The deterioration of a material by repeated deformation

FILLER
A solid compounding material. see  AGGREGATE

FILLER  (DISPERSED  PHASE)
Geometrically  discontinuous  constituent  of the composite

FILLER, GEL
That portion  of  binder  in which  an intimate  mixture  of  filler  and  resin has not been reached

FILLER, BONDED
A particulate composite of the second and third type

FLAT WISE
The direction perpendicular to the layers of a product

FLEXIBILITY
The quality of being pliable

FLOW

  1. The ability of a pile of a fresh mixture to spread when subjected to jolting
  2. Part of those deformations leading to plasticity

FOAM
A cellular  structure  material  formed by  the  stabilization  of  gas bubbbes in a matrix

FOAM, SYNTACTIC
A special kind of gas-filled polymeric  material,  consisting  of  a polymer matrix and a filler of hollow spherical particles (microspheres)

FRICTION
The   resistance    that   arises  when   a  surface   of    one   substance moves over an adjoining surface of another substance

FRICTION, KINETIC
The resistance arising during movement

FRACTION, STATIC
The resistance opposing the starting of movement

FUNCTIONALITY
In a polymer forming reaction: the number of functional groups upon which each of the material compounds can react.
Note:   A   compound    having    two    functional    groups    is    said to be bifunctional and  a compound  having  three  functional  groups is called trifuctional

GEL

  1. A semisolid system consisting of a network of solid colloidal particles in which liquid is held
  2. The initial jelly-like  solid phase that develops  in the course of  curing of a thermosetting resin from a liquid state
  3. With respect to vinyl plastisols, a state between liquid and solid that occurs in the initials states of heating, or upon prolonged storage

Note: All three types of gels have very low strengths and do not flow like a liquid.  They are soft and flexible and  may  rupture  under  their own weight unless supported externally

GEL, CEMENT
The colloidal material that makes up the major portion of the porous mass of which mature hydrated cement paste is composed

GELLING, GELATION
The  transformation  of  a  reactive  mixture  during  the  hardening  process from a liquid state to a jelly-like state

GRAINS
Dispersed particles, mostly observable by the naked eye

GYPSUM, POLYMER IMPREGNATED
A gypsum composite material impregnated with a monomer, in some cases including a prepolymer  or  polymer,  which  in  subsequently  polymerized in situ

HARDENER
A    chemical    compound    causing    solidification    of    reactive    monomers and oligomers (hardening of the resin)

HARDENING

  1. The transformation of the material from  its  viscous  or  liquid  state into the solid state due to the chemical reaction
  2. Increasing of the modulus of elasticity of a material during its plastic deformation (stress hardening)

HARDNESS
Resistance of the material against indentation or scratching by another harder body

HEAT BUILD-UP
The accumulation of thermal energy generated within a material as a result of hysteresis, evidenced by an increase in temperature

HETEROPOLYMER
A polymer produced from  a  monomer,  which  cannot  homopolymerize, by copolymerization with a monomer of another type

HOMOPOLYMER
A polymer formed from a single monomer species
Note:  Also  polycondensate,   if  the  constitutial  unit  of  the  polymer is homogeneous, is called a homopolymer

IMPREGNANT
A material which is used for impregnation of the base structure (concrete, mortar) during the polymer impregnated materials production, and consists of a monomer (in some cases, including prepolymer and polymer), catalyst, promoter, cross-linking agent, plasticizer, etc.
see IMPREGNATION; IMPREGNATION DEPTH; IMPREGNATION PARTIAL;

IMPREGNATION
Saturation  or  penetration  of  a  base  structure  of  open  porosity,  such as hardened concrete and mortar, with a monomer, prepolymer, polymer, etc.

IMPREGNATION, PARTIAL
Saturation   or   penetration   of   a   base   structure   of   open   porosity with a monomer, prepolymer, polymer, etc. to a limited depth from the surface

IMPREGNATION, SKIN
Penetration   of   a  base   structure   of   open  porosity   with   a  monomer,
prepolymer, polymer, etc. to form a thin skin on the inner surface of pores
 
INCLUSION
Separate individual particles in a composite

INCOMBUSTIBILITY
The ability of a material to not ignite, burn, or support fire

INDEX, ABRASION RESISTANCE
The ratio of the abrasion resistance of a material to that of a standard material under the  same  specified  conditions  and  expressed  as  a  ratio of volume losses of both materials (percentage)

INFRASTRUCTURE
(Super)Structure   of   individual    phases    (solid    and    fluid)    present in the composite, abstractly separated in the same configuration (geometrical arrangement)

INHIBITOR
A substance used to restrain or suppress a chemical reaction
Note: Inhibitors, unlike catalysts, are consumed during the reaction

INITIATOR
A reactive substance which during decomposition forms free radicals able to  start  a   chemical   reaction   such   as   polymerization   of   monomers or hardening reaction of liquid resins

INTERFACE
The surface between two different, physically distinguishable media see VALUE, INTERFACE

INTERFACES/INTERPHASES
Any transition zone between phases in polyphase materials (e.g. grain boundaries, interfaces in composites, etc.)

INTERPHASES (REGION OF)
The contact region, where two phases meet and interact with each other, with properties differing  from  those  of  the bulk  material  on either  side of the interphases
see INTERFACE

ISOTROPY, MATERIAL
The    quality    of    a    material    having    the    same    physical    aracteristics in all directions

KNEADER
A  machine  for  mixing  and  homogeneously  kneading  a  mixture  of  high viscosity by severe shear action

LATEX
A colloidal dispersion of a polymer such as natural rubber, synthetic rubber, or other elastomer
Note: The NATURAL LATEX is an emulsion obtained from a plant and the SYNTHETIC LATEX is made mainly by emulsion polymerization

LAYER
A   planar    part    of    a  composite    having    a  different    composition    than the adjacent planar part

LENGTH, CHAIN
see POLYMERIZATION, DEGREE OF

LENGTHWISE
A direction optionally specified, e.g. parallel to the dominating direction of the test piece, or in which an anisotropic material is stronger

LIFE, FATIGUE
The number of cycles or time that a material sustains before breaking under repeating stresses

LIFE, POT
The period of time during which a reacting thermosetting (plastic or rubber) composition remains suitable for its intended use (processing) after mixing with a reaction-initiating agent

LIFE, SHELF
The    maximum  storage  period  for  which  a  material   remains   usable for the intended processes

LIFE, STORAGE
see LIFE, SHELF

LIFE, WORKING
see LIFE, POT

LIMIT, ELASTIC
The  greatest  stress  which  a  material  is  capable  of  sustaining  without any permanent strain remaining upon complete release of the stress

LIMIT, EXPLOSIVE
The range of vapor concentrations of a compound in air at room temperature and normal atmospheric pressure (NTP) that will support combustion

LIMIT, FATIGUE
The maximum stress under which a material can sustain practically infinite repeating cycles

LOADING, MONOMER
The  quantity  of  the  impregnant  contained  in   substrate   immediately after impregnation

LOADING, POLYMER
The weight fraction of the polymer contained in polymer impregnated base structure (concrete, mortar)

LONG-TERM STRENGTH
The ability of a material or structure to maintain near-original strength properties as it ages

LOSS, HYSTERESIS
Loss of mechanical energy due to internal micro fractures of a material during loading

LOSS, VOLATILE
The loss in mass by vaporization of the substances contained in a product or component materials

MASS, MOLECULAR
The relative mass of a molecule of a substance referred to that of the isotope of carbon (12C) taken as 12. For a polymer, since its molecular weight is not constant, consisting of  molecules  of  different  molecular  mass  within the polymer homologue, the mean molecular mass (M) in used

MASTER BATCH
A homogeneous mixture of monomer( s) and one or more materials in known proportions for use as a raw material in the preparation of the final compounds

MASTIC
see PASTE

MATERIAL

  1. A space region  filled  with  any  (mostly  solid)  matter  (in  mechanics of materials considered as continuum with representative volume element available for homogenization)
  2. Any  solid  mono/polyphase,   mono/multicomponent   substance   used in engineering applications

MATERIAL, ACTUAL
A material as it is used and encountered in technical practice

MATERIAL,  BRITTLE
A material, which fails suddenly without significant deformation

MATERIAL,  COMMIXED
Every material system in which the components do not show synergic interaction

MATERIAL,  COMPOUNDING  (INGREDIENT)
A substance used as part of a material

MATERIAL,  COMPOSITE
A solid polyphase material, whose phases  have  macroscopically distinguishable boundaries  and  cannot  be  mutually  transformed  in  each other by any  treatment,  which  attains  properties  no  attainable  by  any  one of the constituing phases itself neither by the simple summation of them

MATERIAL, COMPOSITE HYBRID
A composite of different solid phases including particular as well as fibre constituents

MATERIAL, COMPOSITE PARTICULAR
A composite in which dispersed components have the form of particles with no significant size differences in each direction

MATERIAL OF FIRST TYPE, COMPOSITE
A solid material system in which the dispersing phase, the matrix, prevails, and the elements  of  the  dispersed  phase  are segregated  in it, not  being in direct force contact

MATERIAL OF FOURTH TYPE, COMPOSITE
A disjugated  material system (agglomerate, particular)  in which  the only dispergating phase is formed by fluid
 
MATERIAL OF SECOND TYPE, COMPOSITE
A solid material system in which  the  elements  of  the  dispersed  phase are aggregated to be capable of direct force contact and in which the rest of the space in the structural system in filled with matrix and closed fluid phase

MATERIAL OF THIRD TYPE, COMPOSITE
A solid material system  in which  the elements  of  the  dispersed  phase are  aggregated  to  be  capable  of  direct  force  contact   (in  the  form as in the second type of composites) and in which the rest of the space in structural system is filled with matrix and open fluid phase, the free inner surface thus being connected with the ambient environment

MATERIAL, FLEXIBLE
A  material   that  has  a  modulus  of  elasticity  in  flexure,  or,  if  that is not applicable, in tension, not greater than 70 MPa under stated conditions

MATERIAL, IDEAL
A material (mass medium) which theoretically  fulfills  the  given requirements, and only these, within the given boundaries

MATERIAL  (CONTINUUM), NON-HOMOGENEOUS
A space region filled with different solid and liquid phases and containing non-filled discrete spaces, bonds defects, as inner cracks or disjugated areas. In   mechanics   of    materials    considered    as    a    continuum    without any representative volume element for homogenization

MATERIAL  (CONTINUUM), POROUS
A solid material system containing many dispersed structural spaces throughout (pores, cells), either open, closed,  or  both,  which  are  filled with a fluid phase

MATERIAL, REAL
A material that corresponds in all respects to the respective actual structural material but is not impaired by its incidental imperfections, defects, variability of quality, etc.

MATRIX
The geometrically  and phase  continuous  part  of  the  composite,  bearing and binding the dispersed constituents
see PHASE, DISPERSING

MECHANICS OF MATERIALS
A scientific discipline concerned with the deformation behavior of material structures under loads of any physical or chemical origin

MECHANICS OF MATERIALS, PHYSICO-CHEMICAL
A special branch of the mechanics of material investigating stress and strain states arising in a material medium as the result of physical and chemical processes taking place during deformation. It is an interdisciplinary science between the physics of the solid phase, the physical chemistry of surface phenomena  and  dispersion  systems,  and  mechanics,  and  it  is  based on the thermodynamics common to all of these disciplines
Note: The task of physico-chemical mechanics in the field of structural materials is elucidation of the laws governing the motion of material­ elements in  solids  and  determination  of  the  properties  of  materials as the functions of the composition, structure,  and  deformation properties      of      the      substances      which       constitute       them and   the   configuration    of   the   distribution    of    these    substances in    the    material    under    the     influence     of     the     force     field and the physico-chemical cooperation  of  the  ambient  environment. The  relation  to  the  physics  of  solids  having  been  outlined  above, it  is  now  desirable   to  characterize   the  scope  of  physico-chemical mechanics  with   respect   to  the  smallest  particles   concerned.   Such a  boundary  cannot  be   defined   unambiguously   because   it   depends on the form of existence of every individual material (agglomerate, polycrystal,  amorphous  mass)   and   on  the  influence   of   this   form on  the  deformation  behavior  of  the  given  material.  When  placing a technical accent on the solid component of the material it is possible­ with a certain reservation-to consider such small particles as are still governed by the Newtonian principles of motion, or for which these principles can be abstracted, as a boundary of the scope of physico­ chemical mechanics

MEDIUM (MATERIAL), HOMOGENEOUS MASS
A one-phase bulk material

MEGALLOID
A colloidal system at the level of superstructure

MICRO CRACKS
Fine cracks which  may  extend  in  a  network  on  or  under  the  surface of a material

MICRO FILLER
A solid compounding material in finely divided form (which might interact with   the   polymer   through    the    surface),    added    to    the    polymer for modification of properties of the binder.
Note: The size of micro particles is represented by unit size mesh

 

MICROMECHANICS
A  special  range  of  the   mechanics  of  materials  in  which   the  physical and chemical aspects are considered as given properties of the defined complex system, for  the  description  of  which  the  methods  of  mechanics of the continuum are used

 

MICROSTRUCTURE
The    spatial configuration of chemical  elements  (atoms,  molecules) connected by mutual bonds

MICROVOLUME
The minimum volume of phase (or particle) having still the average properties of phase (or particle)

MIGRATION
Diffusion and/or penetration of plasticizer, etc., between two contacting materials

MIX
An adequate mixture of binder with other material(s)

MIX, POLYMER-CEMENT (READY)
An industrially prepared  mixture  of  cement and  polymer,  serving  as binder of   PCC or PMC

MODIFIER
A    substance    in    the    composition    which    significantly    changes    some of the properties of the mixture or product

MODULUS OF ELASTIClTY
The  quotient  of  the  applied  stress (tensile, bending,  compressive,  shearing, or twisting) divided by the strain produced in a material

MODULUS OF ELASTICITY, APPARENT
The ratio of stress to strain at an arbitrary point of the stress-strain curve in the region beyond the elastic limit

MONOMER
A low molecular  mass substance consisting of molecules capable of reacting with like or unlike molecules to form a polymer

MORTAR
A composite material, which is made by mixing a binder with fine aggregate

OLIGOMER
A substance composed by polycondensation of only a few but always  less than thirty monomer units repeatedly linked to each other, such as a dimmer, trimmer, tetrammer, etc., or their mixtures, with molecular weight under some thousands
Note: The physical properties of an oligomer vary with the addition or removal of one or a few constitutional units from its molecules

PARTICLES,  FICTIVE
A dispersed particle increased by half of the mutual distance between particles, providing the direct force transmission

PARTICLES, GRANULAR
Particles having approximately the same spatial dimensions

PASTE
An  easily  molded   mixture   consisting  of  binder   (e.g. dispersion,    liquid    resin,    catalyst,    promoter)    and the aggregates, used to make joints or repair unevenness cement,  polymer filler,    excluding

PERMEABILITY
The ability of a material to be penetrated by fluid phase
Note:

  1. For a homogeneous material, permeability  of gas according to Fick's a   law   is   equal   to    the    product    of    the    diffusion    coefficient and the solubility coefficient of the gas or vapor
  2. As homogeneous material in  this  sense  it  is  possible  to  consider the composites of I. type without open porosity, e.g. polymer containing fillers or reinforcement or closed pores, or all, uniformly distributed throughout the mass
  3. Generally the permeability of a liquid through  a body  is expressed by the quantity of the gas (vapor) or liquid passing through a unit thickness of a unit area, in a unit time, at a specific temperature
  4. The permeability  of  water  vapor  is specially  called  the  moisture permeability

PERMEANCE
The permeation rate divided by the difference in pressure of a gas (vapor) or liquid between opposite faces of a solid body

PHASE
Every physically quasi homogeneous constituents of a material physically separated  from  other  quasihomogeneous  constituents  by  interfaces and/or interphases, differentiated by the state of matter (solid phase, fluid, i,e, liquid, gaseous phase) and/or by the chemical nature

PHASE, DISCONTINUOUS  FLUID
A fluid phase present  in free spaces of discontinuously porous materials

PHASE, DISPERSING
A  phase   supporting  the  dispersed   constituents,   m  a  composite  most frequently called a matrix

PHASE,  DISPERSED
A phase consisting of dispersed constituents of the composite

PHASE, PRIMARY
The solid phase in a material system

PHASE, SECONDARY
The fluid phase in a material system

PLASTICS
High polymers, usually synthetic, combined with other ingredients (colorant, plasticizers,  etc.)  and  artificially  formed  (shaped,  molded  etc.) into a useful shape

PLASTICITY
The  tendency  of  a  material  above  its  elastic  limit  to  remain deformed after stress removal

PLASTICIZER
A   substance    incorporated    in   a   material    to   increase    its  workability, dispersibility, deformability, or  plasticity

PLASTISOLS
A sol-state paste made by dispersion of a powdery resin in a plasticizer,
see SOL

POINT, FLASH
The lowest temperature at which the vapor of a combustible  liquid can be ignited in air

POINT, GEL
The stage at which a liquid begins to exhibit pseudo elastic properties
Note: The stage may be selected as the inflection point on a viscosity­ time plot

POINT OF TRANSITION
The temperature at which reversible physical changes occur in a polymeric material

POINT, SOFTENING
The temperature at which a polymer undergoes a deformation by heating under a constant load

POINT, YIELD
The first stress in elasto-plastic material, at which an increase in strain occurs without an increase in stress

POLYADDITION
A    polyreaction  implying  the  transfer   of   hydrogen   atoms   between the functional groups of monomers or oligomers, without expelling simple molecules like water (e.g. epoxy resins)

POLYCONDENSATION
A step-wise polyreaction implying chemical reactions between at least two functional    groups     of     monomers     or    oligomers     accompanied     with the elimination of simple molecules like H2O,CO2 (e.g. preparing polyester
oligomers) POLYESTER  (PES)
A polymer in which the propagating chain is linked by ester bonds

POLYMER
A material (generated by polyreaction) consisting of (macro)molecules characterized by the repetition (neglecting ends, branch junctions and other minor irregularities) of one or more types of monomer units, mutually linked by covalent bonds
 
POLYMER, FILLED
A particular composite of the first type
see    SYSTEM,    SEGREGATED;    MATERIAL    OF    FIRST    TYPE, COMPOSITE

POLYMERIZATION
A   self propagating   chain-type   polyreaction   in   which    monomers with unsaturated bonds are linked  together  to  form  polymers  through the opening of the unsaturated bonds (e.g. formation of polystyrene)

POLYREACTION
A  chemical  reaction  m  which  monomers  are  linked  together  to  form polymers
see POLYADDITION, POLYCONDENSATION, POLYMERIZATION

POLYREACTION, DEGREE OF
see DEGREE OF POLYREACTION

POLYREACTION,  EMULSION
A polyreaction performed by emulsifying monomers and then polyreacting in the emulsified state

POLYREACTION,  SOLUTION
A polyreaction  performed  by  dissolving  monomers  and  then  polyreacting in the solution

POLYREACTION, RADIATION
A polyreaction, which is generated or initiated by radiation

POLYREACTION, THERMAL
A polyreaction, which is generated or initiated by heat

POLYREACTION,    THERMAL-CATALYTIC
A polyreaction in which a hardening (catalytic) system is initiated by heat

POLYREACTION, PROPER CHAIN
A process in which  numerous  molecules  of  one  or  several  monomers are fixed to active centers, pre-generated in reactive environment by radical or ion reaction, resulting in mono- or co-polymer of high molecular weight (of the order of hundreds of thousands to millions)

POLYSTYRENE (PS)
A polymer based on styrene or its derivates

POLYVINYL ACETATE   (PVAc)
A polymer prepared by polymerization of vinyl acetate as the sole monomer Note:    PVAc    can    make    a    copolymer    with        polyvinylchloride or    polyvinyl ethylene,    or        is        used    after    being    saponified into polyvinyl alcohol

POLYVINYL ALCOHOL (PVAL)
A   water   soluble   polymer   prepared   by   essentially   complete   hydrolysis of polyvinyl esters (e.g. polyvinyl acetate)

POLYVINYLCHLORIDE (PVC)
A polymer prepared by polymerization of vinyl chloride as the sole monomer

PORE
A single small cavity surronded partially or completely by walls

PORE, CLOSED
A pore totally enclosed by its walls and hence not interconnecting with other pores

PORE, OPEN
A pore not totally enclosed by its walls and hence interconnecting with other pores

POROSITY

  1. The relative volume part of pores (either open, closed or both) in mass
  2. The presence of numerous small cavities

POROSITY,  CLOSED  (DISCONTINUOUS)
The relative volume part of closed pores in a material

POROSITY,  OPEN (CONTINUOUS)
The relative volume part of open pores in a material

POROUS (MATERIAL)
A genetic term for materials containing many pores (eighter open, closed, or both) dispersed throughout the mass

POWDER, REDISPERSABLE
Dry powder with the ability of dispersion when water is added

PREDRYING
The  process  of  drying  of  hygroscopic  compounding  material  by  heating in order to remove the moisture contained

PREHEATING
The  process   of   heating   the   material   of   thermosetting   resin   before it  is  processed  for  the   purpose   of   improving   working   efficiency and the quality of a product

PREPOLYMER
A    reactive   oligomer   of   a   degree   of   polyreaction    between    that of    the  monomer(s)  and  the   final   polymer   obtained   by   stopping the polyreaction at an intermediate stage

PRESSURE, VAPOR
The pressure exerted when a compound is in equilibrium with its own vapour at a given temperature

PRIMER
A  compound  which  is  precoated  on  the  substrate  to  improve  a  bond or adhesion between a material (concrete, mortar etc.) and the substrate

PROCESS ABILITY
The relative ease with which a compounded mix can be handler

PROPERTY, EXTENSIVE (ADDITIVE)
A property dependent on the mass of the system

PROPERTY, INTENSIVE
A property independent of the mass of the system

RADIATION, IONIZING
High energy, electromagnetic waves that activate initiators or create free­ radicals directly from monomers by energy absorption

RATE, PERMEATION
The flow rate of gas (vapor) or liquid under specified continuous, through a prescribed area of a solid body, divided by the area

RATIO, POISSON'S
The ratio of transverse strain to the corresponding axial strain in an elastic straight rod when an axial load is applied
Note: The inverse value of Poisson's ratio is called Poisson's number

RECIPE
A  formulation    mixing  procedure,    and    any  other    instructions    needed for the preparation of a product

RECOVERY
The ability of stressed material to return totally or partially to its original state when external force that has caused the deformation is removed

REINFORCEMENT

  1. The  method  of  increasing  the  mechanical  performance   capability of a material by the incorporation of compounds that do not participate significantly in the hardening process
  2. A solid element incorporated to the  material  (matrix)  for  increasing its mechanical performance capability

RELAXATION, STRESS
The decrease in stress after a given time at constant strain

REPELLENCY, WATER
The ability of a material to resist wetting by water

RESIN
A solid, semisolid or pseudo solid organic material of indefinite, often high molecular weight, which exhibits a tendency to flow when subjected to stress, usually has a softening or melting range, and usually fractures conchoidally
Note: In a broad sense the term is used to designate any polymer that is a basic material for plastics

RESIN, ALKYD
An  unsaturated   polyester  convertible  into  a  cross-linked  form,  requiring a reactant of functionality higher than  two, or having  double  bonds. Most frequently a resin made by condensing a polybasic acid and polyhydric alcohol (UP)

RESIN, CASTING
A liquid resin that can harden without application of pressure

RESIN, EPOXY (E)
Resin containing ether or hydroxyalkyl repeating units,  or  both,  resulting from the ring-opening reactions of lower molecular weight polyfunctional oxirane resins, or compounds,  with catalyst or with various polyfunctional acidic or basic co reactants

RESIN, FURAN (F)
A resin in which the furan ring is an integral part of the polymer chain and represents the greatest amount of mass, usually based on furfuryl alcohol including    resins,    obtained    by    its   polymerization    or   by    condensation of furfuryl alcohol with furfurylaldehyd, formaldehyde, etc.

RESIN, POLYACRYLATE (ACRYLICS) (A)
A polymer based on acrylic esters and their structural derivates

RESIN, POLYMETHACRYLATE  (PMA)
A polymer based on methacrylate esters

RESIN, POLYURETHANE  (PU)
A polymer having urethane linkages in the molecular chains, being obtained by polyaddition of aliphatic diamines or that  of  an  organic  diisocyanate with compounds containing hydroxyl groups
Note: Polyurethanes  may by thermosetting,  thermoplastic,  rigid or soft and flexible, cellular or solid

RESIN, SILICONE (SI)
Polymers in which the main chain consists of silicon oxygen bonds

RESIN, STYRENE-ACRONITRILE  (SAN)
A copolymer based on acrylonitrile, styrene and its derivatives

RESIN,  SYNTHETIC
A  polymer   substance  produced   by  chemical   synthesis,   being   the   main material of plastics, coating material, adhesives, etc.
Note: It is classified mainly as thermosetting resin and thermoplastics resin. A polymer material obtained from plants or animals is called a natural resin

RESIN, UNSATURATED POLYESTER (UP)
A  polyester    having    unsaturated    groups  in  the  main    chain  dissolved in reactive monomer

RESISTANCE, ABRASION
The capacity of a material to resist wear and tear

RESISTANCE, COLD
The lower limit temperature at which the product can maintain flexibility

RESISTANCE, FIRE
The ability of a material to resist fire

RESISTANCE, FLAME
The ability of a material to resist burning

RESISTANCE,  FREEZE-SALT
The ability of a material to withstand repeated frost actions when exposed to salt

RESISTANCE,  FREEZE-THAW
The ability of a material to withstand repeated frost actions

RESISTANCE, FUNGUS
The resistance of a material to the erosion by breeding fungi

RESISTANCE,  IMPACT
The resistance to fracture under shock force

RESISTANCE,  LIGHT (LIGHT STABILITY)
The ability of a material to resist light

RESISTANCE, OIL
The ability of a material  not to swell or to dissolve in oils, and to resist the damage  in  appearance  or  shape  such  as  development  of  cracks, or deterioration of physical properties

RESISTANCE,  SOLVENT
The ability of a material neither to swell nor to easily dissolve in solvents

RESISTANCE,  THERMAL
The ability of a material to resist thermal action

RESISTANCE, WATER

  1. The property of retarding both penetration and wetting by water
  2. The ability of a material to maintain its original properties  after being exposed to water

Note:    All    the    abilities    or    properties    should    be    established by standardized test methods

RESITE
A    certain    thermosetting    resin    in    the    final    three-dimensional    stage of the process of polycondensation, also called C-stage

RESITOL
A    certain    thermosetting    resin    in    the    intermediate    state    where the condensation reaction of resol has been advanced further· but not to final stage, also called B-stage
Note:  The  material  swells  when  in  contact  with  certain  liquids and softens when heated, but may not entirely dissolve or fuse

RESOL
A  certain  thermosetting   resin  being  the  starch-syrup  state  condensate in the early stage of condensation reaction, also called A-stage
Note: The material is still soluble in certain liquids and may be liquid or capable of becoming liquid upon heating

RETENTION, WATER
The ability of a material to prevent internal water evaporation

SAMPLE
A    small    part    or    portion    of    a    material    or    product    intended to be representative of the whole

SAPONIFICATION
A chemical  reaction  in  which  ester  is  hydrolyzed  to  form  carboxylic  acid and  alcohol

SELF-EXTINGUISHING
A property  of a plastic,  burning  on application  of a flame and extinguishing by itself on removal of the flame

SELF-IGNITION
The  minimum   initial  temperature   at  which   a  plastic   is  led  to  ignition, if its temperature is raised at a slow and uniform rate

SET
Strain    remaining    after    complete    release    of    the    force    producing the deformation

SHRINKAGE
Reduction  of  volume  of  a  material  due  to  the  hardening,  solidification or physical changes

SHRINKAGE, PRIMARY
Irreversible reduction of volume of a material due to the chemical hardening or melt solidification

SHRINKAGE, SECONDARY
Reversible reduction of volume of a material due to drying solidification, moisture evaporation, or other constituent evaporation

SOL
A colloid, the dispersing medium of which is a liquid, being the general term for suspension and emulsion
see PLASTISOL

SOLID (IN POLYMER), TOTAL
The weight ratio of the total amount of the polymer, emulsifier and other solid contained in a polymer dispersion, to the total amount of the polymer dispersion

SOLIDIFICATION
Change of a material from viscous (or liquid) state into solid state without chemical changes (e.g. cooling of thermoplastic melt)

SOLVENT
A substance  (usually  liquid)  able  to dissolve  another  substance  (usually specified)

SPECIMEN
A  piece  of  material  sample  appropriately  shaped  and  prepared  so  that it is ready to use for a test

STABILIZER

  1. A  substance  incorporated   in  a  material  to  prevent  its  degradation or deterioration during its production or under its serving conditions
  2. A    substance    incorporated    in    a    material    to    prevent    aggregation (coagulation) of dispersed particles and to impose the storage stability

STRAIN

  1. Deformation developing in a body by a stress
    Note: The strain caused by an internal stress is called internal strain
  2. The unit change, due to force, in the size or shape of a body referred to its original size or shape

STRAIN, TOTAL
The deformation of a body under loading

STRENGTH, ADHESIVE
The adhesion value per area of bonding surface

STRENGTH, BONDING
The strength between two adjacent materials (bodies) connected together

STRENGTH, BURSTING
The hydraulic  pressure  required  to  produce  rupture  in the  test  piece,  when it is continuously pressurized  by a liquid or air

STRENGTH, COMPRESSIVE
The    maximum    compressive    stress    when     a     material     1s    broken by a compressive load

STRENGTH, FLEXURAL (BENDING)
The stress at which breaking takes place by a bending load according to the theory of elasticity

STRENGTH, SHEAR
The maximum shear stress in a material at which it breaks under shearing load

STRENGTH, SPECIFIC
The ratio of the strength of a material to its specific gravity

STRENGTH, TEAR
When a notched test specimen or a specimen prepared  to a special shape is pulled, the tear strength is expressed by the quotient of the maximum stress during the testing of the test specimen, divided by its original thickness

STRENGTH, TENSILE
The maximum stress during the stage until the material breaks by a tensile load, implying the quotient of the maximum load divided by the original cross-sectional area of the test piece

STRESS, FIRST ORDER
The stress in a homogeneous body

STRESS, INNER
The stress produced in a material from causes other than an external force (e.g. temperature changes, shrinkage)

STRESS, SECOND ORDER
The stress in a body consisting of homogeneous particles

STRESS, THIRD ORDER
The stress in a structure of particles (crystalline grains)

STRUCTURE
The  spatial configuration  of  physical  elements  connected  by  mutual  bonds (bringing certain physical properties)

SUBSTRATE
A  material  on  which  another  material  1s  placed   and  should  adhere or be infiltrated

SUBSTRUCTURE
Structure of (agglomerates or) single particles of the dispersed phase

SUPERSTRUCTURE
Structure of composite materials as a whole

SURFACE, FREE INNER
The surface  of  the whole  area  among solid  phase(s)  and  fluid  phase(s) in a structural system

SURFACE, INNER
The sum of the surface areas of all the particles of the dispersed phase (solid or liquid)

SURFACTANT
A   surface   active   compound    in  which   one   portion    of   each   molecule is   hydrophilic    (water-miscible)    and   another   portion    is   lipophilic    (oil­ miscible) or hydrophobic (water immiscible)
see EMULSIFIER

SUSPENSION
A system in  which  solid  particles  are  dispersed  in  a  liquid  in  corpuscles as fine as visible by the naked eye or through a microscope

SWELLING
Increase in volume of a solid immersed in a liquid or exposed to vapour, caused by absorption  of  a  liquid  without  any  change  in  arrangement of structure

SYNERGISM
Co-operative simultaneous action of discrete components such that their total effect is greater than the sum of individual effects

SYSTEM
A  set  of  physical  bodies  which  as  a  whole  is  separated  from  the  rest of the world forming the ambient environment

SYSTEM, AGGREGATED
A system of particles in a composite where the transmission of loading from one grain to another is directed predominantly through compressive or tensile stresses
see SYSTEM, SEGREGATED

SYSTEM, COALESCENT
Compact agglomerated system

SYSTEM, COMPACT (BULK)
A structural material in which solid components fully fill a given volume (resulting in a pore less body)

SYSTEM,  COMPOSITE
A solid product consisting of two or more layers (often in symmetrical assembly) of plastics film or sheet, normal or cellular plastics, metal, wood, composite (according to definition), etc., with or without adhesive interlayer, which attains properties (or a group of properties)  not  attainable by any compound (layer) either singly or by simple summation of them

SYSTEM, CONJUGATED STRUCTURAL
A structural material remaining solid due to the influence of strong physical and/or chemical interface bonds among phases even if outer loading takes place

SYSTEM, DISCONTINUOUSLY  POROUS
A system with closed porosity (with a close inner volume of the fluid phase)

SYSTEM, DISJUGATED STRUCTURAL
A  structural  material  having  limited  coherence  only  due  to  weakness of physical and absence of chemical interface bonds among phases

SYSTEM, FIELD POLYMER IMPREGNATION
A  partial  impregnation  system  in  which  new  or  old  concrete  (mortar) is impregnated in the site

SYSTEM, GRANULAR
A conjugated or disjugated structural system with granular particles

SYSTEM, MACRO DISPERSION
A structural system in which the dispersed particles are mostly observable by the naked eye
 
SYSTEM, MICRO STRUCTURAL
A    system  in   which   the   decisive   influence   is   exercised   by   stresses of the 2nd and 3rd order

SYSTEM,  PARTICULAR
A conjugated or disjugated structural system with particles of different forms and dimensions

SYSTEM, SEGREGATED
A system of particles in a composite, which are not in mutual force contact

SYSTEM, STRUCTURAL
A system in which the decisive influence is exercised by stress of the first order

SYSTEM, SUPERMONOSTRUCTURAL
A super structural system formed by constituents of identical structure

SYSTEM, SUPERMULTISTRUCTURAL
A super structural system formed by constituents of several structures

TEMPERATURE, BRITTLE(NESS)
The upper limit of temperature at which the test specimen of a material has brittle fracture in a low temperature impact test

TEMPERATURE (UNDER LOAD), DEFLECTION
The temperature at which a test piece shows a specific deformation under a specific load,  used  as  a  standard  for  initiating  the  heat  resistance of a composite

TEMPERATURE, MINIMUM FILM FORMATION
The    minimum  temperature  at  which  coherent  film  can   be   formed from polymer dispersion

TEST, DYNAMIC
A test in which load or deforming speed varies. It includes fatigue test, impact test, etc.

TEST, THERMAL (SHOCK)
The test for examining the variation of a material resulting from rapid heating and cooling

TEXTURE
Representation (specification) of the character (regularity) of structure manifesting itself in a certain orientation or other regularity used usually for external surfa

THERMOPLASTIC
Linear or branched polymers, which can be softened, and take on new shapes by application of heat and pressure only. They can be repeatedly reshaped as no chemical changes are involved in the process.

THERMOSET  (REACTOPLAST)
Cross-linked  polymer  originating  by  chemical  reaction  in  the   case   that the functionality of at least one monomer is higher than 2, not fusible by heat

THERMOSETTING
Capable of being changed into a substantially infusible or insoluble product when cured by heat or other means

THIXOTROPY
The property of  a  material  that  enables  it  to  stiffen  in  a  short  period of standing, but to acquire a flow ability on mechanical agitation, shaking, etc., the process being reversible

TIME, CURE
The period of  time  that  a  reacting  thermosetting  material  is  exposed to specific conditions to reach a specified property level

TIME, GEL
The time from the initial mixing of the reactants of a liquid material (monomer or resin) composition to the time when gelatination starts
Note: For a material that must be processed by exposure to some form of energy, the initial time is the start exposure

TOUGHNESS
Energy required to break  a  material  which  is equal  to  the  area  under the stress-strain curve

TRANSITION (Tg), GLASS
The temperature at which the polymeric material  undergoes  a  change from a melt or rubbery state to a glassy, hard and brittle state. This transition is associated with the cessation of local molecular motion
Note:

  1. The observed  temperature  can vary significantly  depending on  the  specific  property   chosen  for  observation   and  on  details of the experimental  technique.  Therefore,  the  observed  Tg  should be considered only an estimate
  2. The  midpoint  of  the  temperature  range  over  which  this transition takes place is commonly termed the GLASS TRANSITION

TEMPERATURE  or GLASS TRANSITION  POINT
After reaching it, the thermal change rates of physical properties change discontinuously.

TRANSITION,  FIRST-ORDER
A reversible change in the phase state of a material, in the case of polymers­ crystallization and melting. This transition is usually sharp and associated with a discontinuous change in a function, such as volume or enthalpy.
Note: The midpoint of the temperature range over which transition takes place is commonly termed as FIRST-ORDER TRANSITION TEMPERATURE

TRANSITION,   SECOND-ORDER
A reversible, but continuous, change of a function, like volume. The glass­ transition   is   a   second   order   transition   involving   only   a   change in the temperature coefficient of the specific volume

UNSATURATION,  DEGREE OF (RATE OF)
Number of binary bonds occurring in one monomer molecule
Note: If the degree  of  unsaturation  of  all  monomers  equals  1, the chaining is linear and a thermoplastic polymer originates. If at least one  monomer  has  the   degree   of   unsaturation   in   excess   of   1, a thermosetting polymer originates.

VALUE, ACID
The free  acid  content  in  a  resin,  plasticizer,  solvent,  or  else,  expressed by the number of milligrams of potassium hydroxide  required  to neutralize the free acid contained in 1 kg of the material

VALUE,  ADHESION
The force required to cause a separation at the interface of two bonded (adhered) surfaces or components

VALUE, IMPACT
A value representing the resistance of a material to impact, generally expressed by the  quotient  of  the  energy  required  to  break  a test  piece by an impact bending load divided  by the cross-sectional  area or width of the test piece

VALUE, INTERFACE
The  magnitude   of   inner   surface  of   individual   phases,   most   frequently the surface of all particles of the dispersed phase or/and of all pores

VISCOELASTICITY
Any combination of viscous and elastic behavior

VISCOSITY
The resistance  of a material to flow under stress, expressed by the ratio of a shearing force exerted on the material to the shearing strain speed (Pa.s)
Note:

  1. The viscosity varies with the shearing stress for non-Newtonian fluids (e.g. plastics ). Therefore, the viscosity at a specific stress is called the APPARENT  VISCOSITY
  2. The quotient of the viscosity divided by the density of the fluid is the KINEMATIC VISCOSITY (m2s-1

VOID
In a solid material, an unfilled  space of such size that it scatters radiant energy such as light
see PORE, CELLS

VOLUME, CRITICAL MATRIX
The  amount  of  matrix   (binder)  needed   to  envelop  all  the  particles in the aggregated system
Note: The decrease of matrix volume under this limit causes existence of disjugated agglomerates of conjugated particles in the aggregated system and the system turns into a non-cohesive system

VOLUME, FICTIVE MATRIX
The real matrix volume lessened by the volume firmly bonded to the surface of particles, which is taken as their physical part

VOLUME, REAL
The volume of binder (matrix) put into the system

VOLUME, REPRESENTATIVE
The minimum volume of the system which is large enough with respect to the present heterogeneities to be considered as a homogeneous material

WARP (WARPAGE)
Concave   or   convex   distortion   of   mainly   flat   members   by   the   strain after placing and hardening. A dish-like deformation is called a DISHING and the opposite a DOMING

WATER PROOFNESS
The ability of a material to maintain its original properties while exposed to water

WATER TIGHTNESS
The ability of a material to resist penetration of water see WATER PROOFNESS

WEAR
The    cumulative    action    of    all    the    deleterious    mechanical    influences encountered in use that tend to impair a material's serviceability

WEATHERING
Deterioration of a material during outdoor exposure

WEATHERING, ARTIFICIAL
Exposure to laboratory (usually intensified) conditions which may be cyclic, involving  changes   in  temperature,  relative  humidity,  radiant  energy, and any other elements found in the atmosphere in various geographical areas

WEIGHT, UNIT
The weight of representative volume equal the specific weight or density of composite

WICKING
Transmission  of gas or liquid  due to a pressure  differential  or capillary action, along fibers incorporated in a product

WORKABILITY
The ability of a fresh mix to be worked and molded into desired form