SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT BARTENEV, G. M. - BARTENEV, G. M.
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CIA-RDP86-00513R000203720018-8
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RIF
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S
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100
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Publication Date:
December 31, 1967
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69-20-3-8/24
The Structure of Vu:canized Rubber and Its Perneability to
Gases
meability of rubber and vulcanizates is influenced by cross
linkirgs as well as intermolecular forces, mostly from the
polar type.
There are 5 graphs, 2 tables, and 11 references, 8 of which
are Soviet, 2 English, and 1 French.
ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut rezinovoy
promyshlennosti
floskva (Scientific Research Institute of the Rubber Industry,
Moscow)
SUBMITTED: November 30, 1957
Card 2/2 1, Rubber-Yulcanized-Permeability 2.
Gases-Applicationo
2G-V-69-2,'-r--_'9/23
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G.N., Yudina, T-V., Rebinder, P,A.
TITLE: A Contribution to 'he Theory of the Spontaneous
Dispersion
of Solid Bodies (K toorii samoproizvoi. ncgo dispergiro7aniya
tverdykh tel)
PERIODICAL: Kolloidnyy zhurnal, 19~58, Vol XX, lir 5., :)p
655-661t (USSR)
ABSTRACT: The cause for the resistance decrease of a solid in a
sur-
face-active medium is the --eduction of sarfa,2e energy un
the border solid-meditim. V'edia which are sim--lar in their
molecular nature decrease The surface ter3ion of "he solid
and rupture takes place, For metals, suzn media are low-
meltirg metals and alloys. Spontaneous diSpersion takes
place along wakened borders, %YhereaG destruztion from out-
side moves along the plane of greatest stress.. The growth
of cracks proceeds with increasing speed unjer outside stress.
in spontaneous dispersion, the speed is mora unifcrm, al-
though low. In Figure 2 the left min-_mum of potentiai ener-
gy corresponds to the stable condition e),f the partic3es in
the body, the right rainimum to The stable condition on the
new free surface. In e7ery crystal, there are surface de-
fects and micro-cracks which appear during the growth of
Card 1/2 the crystal. During spontaneous dispersion the active
me-
~~,gv Q -
~OV-059-20-5-191/23
A Contribution to the Theory of the Spontaneous Dispersion of
Solid Bodies
dium penetrates these micro-:ra--ks qnd anters the interior
of the monocrystal. The decrease ir, resistance in solids
is caused by two facts-. the decrease o-.1' the free surfase
energy, and the two-dimensional pressure of the adsorbed
layer on the steric hindran-~e a-, -the peak of the crack.,
Spontaneous dispersion is possible, if the total stress at
the top of the micro-crack is greater than the safe stress
in the given medium. The safe stress is determined ac~cord-
ing to a given equation by thE surface stress of the body
in the medium.
ASSOCIATION: Yoskovskiy pedagogicheskiy inst-itut im.
llotemkina.Kafedra
teoreticheskoy fizik.' (Nc-scow feiagcgi-, Institute imeni Po-
temkin7Chair of Theoretical Physics). Institu-.- fiziches-
koy khimii AN SSSROtde], d-ispersnykh sistem k'lnst---,ute of'
Physical Chemistry of' -the USSR Academy z~f Sciences,,Depart.-
ment of Dispersed SYSTeMS.)
SUBMITTED: June 16, 1958
1. fietals-Fracture 2. Yletals--Sirface properties 3. Crystals
-Deformation
Card 2/2
Bi-IRTENOV) G. IrIll.; SHCHUUN) le. D.; REMINDM, 11. A.;
IZEUITIM"t, V. I.;
"Deforriation processes, the rheological conduct and the
destruction of sol-fdz and
metais. "
ragm VwmeaW at Va YbarM All4kilm Cmfwmo on CaUol"l OWRUtry,
Thnw, oomsim m.. 12-U my iM (KoU Our 20,5, p.On-q, 138, bmbmnv
A.D)
571-2-17/32-
AU'!TOR5t Bartenev, G. It. L. S.
TITLE: The influence xerted by tha Intcr-molecular Interaction, the
Cross-Linking and the To...:e r.-it-are Upon the Destruction and the
'2ine Dependence of the Stren-th of Caoutc.,ouc-Like Polymers
(Vliyaniye -,iez'!irAekulyarnoZ;o vzaimode:~stviya, poperechnoGo
sshivaniya i temperatury na razrusheniye i vreraennuyu zavisi-
most' prochnosti kauchul-opodobnykh polimerov)
PERIODICAL: Zhurnal '4"eklinichoskoy Fiziki, 1953, Vcl. 21), Nr 2,
pp. 287 - 295
~USSR)
ABSTRAC'j.': -2he follortin- norc:r-jstallizin~; rubbers were
investir-,ated here:
polybuta-diene-rubbar2, but,%diene-styrane-rubbers and butadiene-
-nitrile-rubberc. Cross-linka,:;es were introduced into the rubber
by mcars of in an electric press at 1430C.
'2he ti:-.ic from th,-, :moment of the be~jnnin-;- of strain until the
div-ision of the samplt~ -into two par. ( uture period or life)
s kru-
vins measurQd, It i:; 3hou-n that t:l,, dL-endence Of thE strenGth
in rubber-like polymerc, is Cliffercilt -from that of 3olid bodies
Card 1/3 and follows the fo---.-:iula 9' - B 0-b. With the increase
57-2-17/32
The Influence Exerted by the Intcr:-iolciil.~r Interaction, the
Cross-Liding and
the Temperature Upon the D:!struc Lion und the Tinze Dependence of the
StrenE;th
of Caoutcbouc-Like Pol.,-mers
in the intermolccu.lar interaction (polarity, cross-linking, fil-
ling), however, it --,proaches the dependence characteristic of
solid subatanccs. Onqof the -",:a-.ons for the behavbr of the group
of caoutchouc-like - L
polyniera is their c,-pability of molecular
orientation on defo:lution. It i5 further shown that the tem-
lerature ,1cpendcrc:c of t1w Irer,-t7-i of rubbor-like polymers fol-
lows the exponential laa. '2hio tenperature-depenAence differs
from the tc-!rcraturc r1epo:,.Jc?ncc of the strength of solid poly-
mers by the fact that undor - 'rariouij strains no pole occurs at
the tomperature-curves, whereas in the canso of solid polymers
3uch a pole exiuts. This Is explained 17 the non-exponential
dependence of the life of rubb~r-like polymers on strain. The
temperature over tirric.. de- I
.pcndenca of the stren-th f rubber-
-like PO1YMerS follows the fornula _T _ C Op" YJ OUAT, where
b and C are conntant's dei,ondent on thc: type of riibloar and the
structure of th(j vulc:uJ~-_~Aiozj -p,-%)d11Ct. U i3 the activation
ener-
,:;y. All. rubber-li!:~, arc In the cace of laatin~; cracks
4n two stae-es. 1-~
e1naracterizod 1Pj duzt;-uction '_,.ki% pj_C._
--c t'-e surfacL- the place of crack develops,
11,~ first ota.' (.. I I
Card 2/3 in the sc~:ond tliv s-ioczl: --no. In the a3e of an elast-1c
57-2- 17/32
The Influence
Exerted by the Intermolecular Intc:-action,
the Croon-Linking Md
the Temperature Upon the Destr-letion and the
Ti-na Denandence of the Strength
of Caoutchouc _
T Jke Polymers
Aj~
crack the fact is opecific tilzit, in nomparioon to the solid
bo-
dies, the o-rder of zones at t1,G crach-jurface c.-"
r-,,Wber-like
polymers is an inverse one, where the first sta~;e of
breack is
characterized by a fibrous nechanism of destruction. It is
shown
tl:at a decrease in strain, of the numbcr of cross-linkaE;es
(the equilibritzin modulus), of the intc.;rmolecular interaction
(the polarity) leads to a displacement of the nirror zone by the
rough one. A chance of temparature influences the rel-ition of
the
mirror- and the rough zone, in dependence of the kind of
rubber, in
different ways. There --re 10 figures, 2 tables, and
9 references,
all of which are Slavic.
ASSOCIATIOM
PedagocimLl Inzti tuto YMo scow,
imerii Potam%in. Chair oFTheoreti-
cal Physics. Scientific Research
Inutitu-te of tbe Rubber Indu-
stry'Moscow. (Moskovski,
pedago-icheskiy institut im. Potemkina.
Kafedra teoreticheskoy
fiz4k-. ilaucbno-issiedovatellskiy insti-
tut rezinovoy
promyshlcnno;t-4.Moskva)
SUB14ITTED:
January 24, 1957
AVAILABLEt
Library of Con-ress
Card 3/3
1. Rubber-Test results 2. Rubber-Test
methods
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G. M.? Kolbasnikova, A. 1. 57-28-6-11/34
TITLE: On the Comparison of the Theory of ulass
Hardening With Experimntation (K sravneniyu teorii
zakalki stekla a eksperimenzom)
PERIODICAL: Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoy Fiziki, 1958, Vol. 28, Nr 6f
PP, 1195-1200 ~USSR)
ABSTRACT: Glass hardening is at present being used in an ever-
-increasing degree as an effective method of increasing
the strength and the thermal durability of glass products,
especially for the production of new types of extremely
solid technical glass. The method of hardening has already
been described previous'ly kreference8 1 and 2). The
elasticity theory- (zeference 1) leads to the following
formula for internal tensions in hardened flat glass:
6 (x) E (F- (1). Finding the mathematical
-form of the function F(x, 1) is the basic problem of the
theory of glass hardening. The tensions of the elongation
Card 1/4
on the Comparison of the Theory of Glass hardening 57-28-6-11/34
With Experimentation
6. z in the central plane of the hardened plate are
(5 - 1 ' 14,Tg~ (~) - KT (y) (2)
Renewed investigation of the influence exercised by
physical properties upon the amount of hardening-tensions
(in the case of regular hardening) showed agreement of
experimental data with the formula (2). The authors
hardened 8 types of glass of different composition. They
were selected in such a manner that there was considerable
difference with respect to the quantity K (table). The
worked-out results (figure 2) of experimental data were
givem in dimensionless parameters'+(~)1~4hawhich m6lm it possible
to compare the hardening formulae with the experiment.
Herefrom it may be seen that not one of the theoretical
dependences agrees with the experiment. This is probably
caused by the fact that the formulae are based upon
inaccurate data. As a result of thn generalization of
Card 2/4 experimental data (figure 2) the dependence of the
On the Com-oprison of tho Theory of Glas3 lardening
57-28-6-11/34-
Wi th &-perimentatiOn
hardening function on the criterion of Bio (upper curve)
was obtained. This can be utilized in calculating the
degree of hardness according to formula (2). The analytical
form of this dependence at ha-;,-OP5, which practically
comprises all cases ocarring in the technology of hardening,
can be expressed in the approximation by the formula
Y(S) - 0,23 (f2.
At present degrees of hardness were attained which
correspond to T (J) - 0,31- it follows herefrom
(reference 2) that where the limiting value theoretically
expected at ha ---3t oO is p 0,36, the possibilities
of increasing the degree of hardness are exhausted~
Experimental data (figure 2) and the amount of the maximum
degree of hardness Lf(JO - Oy6q, which were calculated
according to the f0 la
(p(d) -1 1n Goa ydy (3)
Card 3/4 lead to the ooncl~sloun that the possibilities of
On the Comparison of the Theory of Glass hardeAing 57-28-6-11/34
wit- Zxperimentation
increasing the strength of glass by hardening are not
exhausted. There are 3 figures, I table, and 11 references,
11 of which are Soviet.
ASSOCIATION: Vsesoyuznyy nauchno--i3sledovatelfskly institut
atekla,
Moskva (Moscow.All-Union Scientific Research Institute
for Glass)
SUBMITTED: October 20, 1956
1. Glass-Hardening 2. Glass-41echanica:1 properties
3. Hardenability-Theory
Card 4/4
sov/57-28-7-18/35
AUTHORS:
Barteriev, Go M., Ivanova, A. I.
TITLE:
The Streneth of Quenched Glasses (Prochnoatt zakalennykh
stekol)
PERIODICAL:
Zhurnal tekhnicheakoy fiziki, 1958, Vol. 28,
Nr 7,PP.1467-1476
(USSR)
ABSTRACT:
First the formula f,-ir the
oalculation of the strength with
respect to expansion and
bending (1) is deduced. It is shown
that for determining the
strength of the quenched glass
(without destroying it) two
magnitudes must be evaluated;
viz. P - the strength of the
burned glass which is determin-
ed expgrimentallyp and x - a
dimensionless factor which
establishes a relation between the
surface tensions and the
tensions in the middle of the glass
(where the maximum of
expansion occurs). The, authors
investigated the strength of
a flat glass with respect to
cross-bending as well as to a
syiwaotrical bendingr and also
the bending strength of the
rods. The following was fourtd: 1)
The strength of quenched
Card 1/3
glasses depends on the degree
of quenching, the character
SOV/ 57-.23--7-18/35
The Strength of Qaenohed Glasses
of the distribution of Internal stress and the mode of in-
vestigation. 2) The destruction begins at the weakest points.
These are the edges and the surfaceo Depending on the degree
of quenching~ the solidifying of the edges in quenching and
the mode of investigation,the destruction in the one cases
begins at the edges and ih other casesit starts from the sur-
face. In glasses that had not ber quenched the surface
strength is by 300 to 4oo kg/cm higher than the strength
of the edges. In quenched glasses the difference varies de-
pending on the degree of edge solidification) it is, however,
not greater than the above mentioned value- 3) The strength
of the quenched glasses -wary weakly depends on the scale
factor and on the chemioal composition- 4) The evaluation
of the experimental data permits to recommend simple formulae
for the calculation of the strength of quenched glasses.
There are 6 figures and 11 references, 6 of which are Soviet.
ASSOCIATION: Vsesoy-aznyy nauchne-issledovatePskiy institut
stekla,Moskva
Card 2/3 (All-Union Scientific, Research Institute for
Gl&ss, ~bacow).__
Thi Strength of Quenched Glassee sov/57-29-7-18/35
SUBMITTED: October 2o, 1956
1. Glass--Physical properties
Card 3/3
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G. M., Styran, Z. Ye. SOV/20-121-1-23/55
TITLE: Friction Properties of Rubber-Like Polymers
(Friktsionn~ve
svoystva kauchukopodobnykh Polimerov)
PERIODICAL: Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR, 1958, Vol. 121, Nr 1,
PP. 87-90
(USSR)
ABSTRACT.- Accordint, to the data given by the authors the
characteristics
of friction of a rubber-like and of a solid polymer are dif-
ferent which speaks for a difference in the nature of the
friction of these materials. In the investigation of the mo-
lecular model of the friction the authors start with the model
of the net-like rubber polymer which consists of flexible
linear molecules. The number of the chains in contact with the
surface depends on the factual contact face. Each chain only
temporarily is in contact with the surface and then jumps over
to a new point of contact. The iuthors investigated the fric-
tion of vulcanized rubber on smooth solid surfaces in depend-
ence on temperature, velocity of gliding, load, rubber type,
and the density of the space lattice. The obtained data prove
the characteristic nature of the friction of rubber-like poly-
Card 1/3 mers. In a wide range of velocities (4 orders of
magnitudes)
Friction Properties of Rubber-Like Polymers SOV120-.121-1-23155
the experimental dependence is practically described by a
straight line. The sort of the solid support influences the
activation energy. One more diagram illustrates the tempera-
ture dependence of the frictional force of a certain sort of
rubber on steel. According to these data the friction of
rubber-like polymers agrees well with the theorj in a wide
interval of gliding velocities and temperatures. The activa-
tion energy depends, though only weakly, on the structure of
the rubber. The activation energy is weakly, the surface of
factual contact, however, strongly dependent on the modulus
of elasticity of the rubber. On occasion of a transition from
one type of a polymer to an other one the activation enerCy
varies considerably. The external friction (as well as the
internal friction) of the rubber-like polymers is, according
to the obtained data, a molecular-kinetic process which is
connected with the transition of the kinetic units (chains)
through the energy barriers under the influence of the heat
movement and of the external force. There are 3 fi3ures- and
7 references, 3 of which are Soviet.
ASSOCIATION; Nauchno-Issledovatellskiy institut rezinovoy
promyshlennost-i
Card 2/3 Scientific Research Institute of Rubber Industry)
0
, Friction Properties of Rubber-Like Polymers SOV/20-121-1-23/55
PRESENTED: April 3, 1958, by P. A. Rebinder, Member, Academy of
Sciences,
USSR
SUBMITTED: April 31, 1958
1. Polymers-Friction 2. Polymers-Internal friction 3. Polyzers
--Elasticity 4. Rubber-Friction 5. Friction-Analysis
Card 3/3
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G._.jL.,--Tsepkov, L. P. SOV/2o-121-2-18/53
TITLE: The Scale Factor and the Strength of Glass (Masshtabnyy
faktor
i prochnost' stekla)
PERIODICAL: Doklady Akademii nauk SSSR, 1956, Vol. 121, Nr 2,
pp. 26o - 263 (USSR)
ABSTRACT: The purpose of the present paper is an investigation
of
the scale effect under different experimental conditions
and with different samples. By scale effect the influence
of the dimensions of the working parts of a sample or a
product on its strength is meant. This effect is most distinctly
marked in brittle material, as e.g. silicate glass. Ex-
perience has shown that the strength of glass practically only
depends on the strength of the surface. At first the authors
briefly discuss a few previous papers (Refs 1-6) which in the
description of the influence of the scale factor on the strength
of glass arrived at contradicting results. In the following
at first the strength of a glass fibre and then different
bending and stretching experiments with glass samples are
discussed. The strength of a fibre only depends on the
Card 1/3 coefficient of expansion a, but not on the diameter of
the
The Scale Factor and the Strength of Glass SOV/2o-121-2-lb/53
fibre. For a it is valid a - I +F-pi, where 6p, is the value
of the plastic deformation in the production. The crack
resistance does not change by changing the diameter of a fibre
(if a . const). Bending and stretching experiments with glass
plates provided the following results: 1) The strength does
not change with the thickness; 2) Glass, investigated by the
method of vertical stretching, shows an influence of the
thickness on the surface condition: The thicker the glass,
the lower will be the strength of its surface. In figures
the tables show the results of bending and stretching ex-
periments (transverse and symmetrical bending). It becomes
evident that the influence of internal tensions can be neglected
as lonr or these are small. There are 4 figures and 9 refer-
ences, which are Soviet.
ASSOCIATION: Vsesoyuznyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut
stekla (All
Union Scientific Research Institute for Glass
Card 2/3
The Scale Factor and the Strength of Glass SOV/2o-121-2-18/53
PRESENTED: January 13, 1958, by P.A.Rebinder, Member, Academy of
Sciences, USSR
SUBMITTED: January 9, 1958
Card 3/3
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(state Qptloal Institute Isoul S. 1.
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reports em the struature of glass.
lsvv.t1ff-%l_ sathods of Me
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0. 0: Karepol7aft resorted go the Influsame
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@to a spectral and obealeal prop.rtisa at
the Cor.lose. I. T. Orlw
r
myorled *a the role of *be a4aixturts and
the
the lattice In the oolorlag of %.art% glass
hr a.=. rdiallou.
t. X. sly"m am 1. L.-.Dnter reported catthe
saiii-e-orpor. roza1tion In ameate **its
to" at"..
T~jjT or 01. eye "Per%*$ as la'qstls~tlo-a
of
so 11 Of mijary *aides in a slat* of
ejulilarl". 1. P. rqn5-6r.
Th. Imports". of the Tltr."* them. In the
Care 6/9 My and the Cannot Clinkoe . T. A.
Prowma, rparl" On the ph:sla~
4 misal-findamostals of ,~i mat&rTbe e&.%
:ILU dealt *Itb physical ch.alatry end
m#OkoAjs.2 properties
-- :; glass. Z. 1. loveir.P.Y.V. 0. X.
Dartoo.. "a a. K. a.'Vrovo
an's oeaptwhanalm reports. A. A. Apt=
reparlOd an the fadavcm-
162 structural paramstere blih-Eittrilm the
properties of the
glese.4. T. Cladkov, 1. A Polkmr.. T. 1.
T-."v Topart-A an
I. X. Peaklm reported an P.oallarltl.. of
lb. oxpan.14a of 0211-6
6Issosa;cATtj. SlavZmm ty reported ea. the
~Vjcttl
avad. "_C;k
Tbe-Saarmy of Cv'A &so AAJ n.12 1.10 In th-
Proco.0
at the Via."* Flux-. S. X,_!rr1%sb%j.
raparted on VNY-1-9boal-al
properties of samumpburpTale glasses. To.
1. 3h1%4% reported am th.
4 as %be
gt.&4*~ of tb. properties of alk.11 .
allies. Z. 1. Shob.clova r.part.4 was Of Us
DO-
be
":1 *14 set Vlrop*rtl.s of Phoophol.
alma*se " I
al .. A. j1_1~kkhind reported an the
suile.l: Th. r.rilit
opsl.m mad the optical C."Saals or Diego-.
W. a. A.1-01% "period
ant -Mechanical properties of Close Fitmr.-
0. 11,-1 1 A 3
j!" v "do a "port on the usubsaleal
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tl:*%.; properts., of glaso.$ am i's
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their w.clanleal
propames. reported on Ah. "ViVi L."hing or
Nation ats".21ke jamalte ly Aa.~ Saint I
On0 kolas AzI the
St. I "r I
it Of the oxides in the a u:Sare of glass
ansalip,. a. M.
3rakb:Mkb,eV,T._j. U.or.,. reported as
vy-tbO-im -4
ji&~ to 111jas =Sso.s. a. K. Wlrov. r.p*rU4
an pby-l~
oboolo-I Properties of Olll.% ffl-.-amo. T.
A. b"ro-ekli,
.4 1. �,j~%VMskaya roport*& so the mrf--o
fits fQiaLsTbm -.1- -A"
sla&_oodion glass in the &oldie. ...tr.1 "A
basic nadl%~ n- V41-
I"Ing Persons rport*d at the final meetings
T. ?. zokorloa a. I
it'. Lafl%mdo of the alkaline *Lrikh oxides
as the sh"I.Pal sta"Itty
at glasses in a b.KId at*ooyb*rol L. To.
U.s*lo. on 'itzlfl.411va
sed Froperil.. of vorsis 11.6foof 1. To. A.
Mat.r.l.
"a T, action al ... i~ LW sale-
-I-N.loo7ol on the V
it.". Doctor Tog.1 and I..:gor stake as
Castle frou tests" 0-rm-A7.
Lom*.loi&a 1. T. V.1ov, X. A. 1.01a"do'. 1.
1. Kl%.ya*ro4.k1,T.
sea a. K. 1.147 &too spoke .1 the final
amelime.
gsr.$ 0/4
V-CC7uz"OY' -- O-Aj~~ J~ .'.011-4
tr,ly T-Oyc ~o ~scxvy-- 0
26-V DC70-y~ (VlXr",r "me; Trk-ftrlS-~ ~f
t ~t ',~Ara
-1r
ttr..ce 0., the 1:,1d 1'~ -'~. 1'/,'))
Y-CZ1,
ILd.vo ki 67Z!l, ltf~O. 5!J4 p. Frret&
*11? I-erteJ. 5,21W co;'.ez printe-1.
(Serlex: Its: Trj~f)
SponeorIng jutitit WWl slllktc~ fto!-11
naLk f-'SR. V91-07ux"Oye
104.1checkvy. AI or!-%.
1A.It's aptich..Uy 1.4titIt $4.
Mtorl.1 ll~,d: A.I. V.P. M.A. O.r.
Potelt'Nlz,
Y.V.V.r6t., A.G. VIAr-, K.S. A.A. Let,!-,
9.4. wwvtyev' V.S.
Kolchamc~, R.L. Myuller, Tr.A. Cnaim-,
N.A. Tom,~, V.k.
Tlorln.L,ya, A.K. Talthkin-J, U. or E7ae:
I.Y. S ~Oro~; Tech, Xd.:
T.T. Zoche,or.
PJRP~Cr: This book Is Intendel for
researcher* In the xcltv" and technolotz
Or
glasses.
COIMI.k-,E- Tl~e book e-W.a t-%e reports
and 43-~.lomm of t!,e TlArZ All-VOlm
Conference on the Vltrec,~ Statet beld In
Lelingrad V.. Ztr'~_tmr 1~-19' 191?.
They deKI vith the methods aid reculte of
t-~dyjne via trilt._ of giaaz~q' v-ur
relation Iietve- the mtr~ct'~ w4
pmpertlAZ of the nat-C Of t"
ck,mics,l bool and glass structwoo sr,-1
the crystallochtalstry of glass. Fused
sill-, Och.'ita or 'Itelffe.tion, op%I-L
properties and el". struct.re. ac'd
the electrIcal properties or el.-*t* e,re
also 41tcuesed. A striber of the rv-
port. deal vith the dependomce of glass
properties on cccip2ett-cci, th" tl.-lr4
or
91"6e6 and adl.tion effects, and
"Chsmlc~l, technical, and CA-lr&l P-O;-.-
:
ties a' g1tsats. Otbnr papers treat glass
smlcmd.i~%~rs ~d WEs birovillm.
9I.Sfel. The COnfore.Cl ~ 9-tc.&cd W
sTTr. thAn 30~ 1`1103 SDTitt 4=1
Last Cier~ cleatific Among the
participants to ZS* d.14~*811c,4
vere N.V. 901.1.1n, Te. V. Kuvshl.Wy,
Yq.A. G-t-, V.P. Fryw,:&Wko~, Im. Ya-
Gotl1b, O.P. G.P. KIkh.yj_' S.M. Petrol,
A.M. IAmm~. V.I.
loldn, A.V. Chstllo~, P.T. FlosbetA"Lly,
A.Ta. Kanetcc~, E.Y. DcCtIrsrem, G.T.
Iyargeno,skay., A.A. M.M. Zkomy%X~, r.Ye.
bol-.11., Z.K. XeU.r. Ift.A.
guinets"t Y.P. Potduev, R.S. Sh"elevlcbt
Z.G. ?I-Ler, cmd O.S. Molchtc-~.
The final session of the Conf,mn" ...
dlm.med by Prof-Cor Z.1. r1tayg-mlskly.
Xonomd Scientist and F-Wineer, Doctor of
TweLalcal Science&. Tna 1`02_1~dnz
InstItutev were cite-I fv, t-.,eir
cc,Arlb~tlm to the 4evelc~p-at of Slane
sclea,ce
~d technolo,:Y: Go%.v~'"%vr-yy ortich-kty
Inatitat (state Optiml Instivite),
Iustltut kUnlI 411LJI%t~ AN ="R (I"Uti-e
ar Slljtst~ C-=_Istry, AS' WZA),
rltltj~lbkly 1-tita AN SS5.9 (physics A5
M~S),
It-tlt-t AN SOC-R (I`Ly1I~.-.tc!.l,aI
lo.tit.te AS =y), Imtlt,,% rizitj Ar t=lt.
MI154k (Zmtlt.te or INylice, Aedcmy or
Scj..c.., B.I~,leys
Wooratory of fty6leal Cj~eAjatry or
Silicates of t1w lnstlt~t I
ch-VVY Wall JLI trZA, Fln.k (Instltat4 al
General c-A Ch-latry,
Aoale.y or Scle,-, JLIvr~.ky& OR Ntr,&),
lrstltrjt 7.ckocojek~~myl~
toyellne.ly &.4 ~5.A(I-ctlUt- of
HIO'M-lec4Ir,r Compo~nd., AS G-.dA=t-.-
PY7 Institut &tell .(Btmt 1~.tlt.tt for
Slane), CozU~rstvr~yy luatitut s-.tk.
Iw*IAXn% (StLt! Irsttt~t- for Glz~v
Fibers), C~-Arxtvelryy instlt~t
eIvktmt*X.-'-
bictiv,skozo mtckl~. Cst~to, Inst'W" for
EItctrical Class), gltlr.Viy t1tilto.
tethulch"l,iy lh*%lt4t' T-k (Blb4rlsq
nyxicotec!~nIck!
BUY .11-erOlt4t FlAt. kolk~lkty Lh.'k-
t-kh:101091c%triLly I.-Lit-A JrAtItutt of
Ct--,41
tekhnOloA,lc%-mlIy Ij,9tlt,,t in. Le
n"ve&a (t*njTjZr,4 T,,joln;Icel lmttltqt
11,1cr-,kly 1.11tekmiveskly F.I..k
rolytc~'...c
Inetitute, Minsk), Wt~mierkt.xtiy
polittlhAlt"lltly Ion.Itut (N~nchcrkm.k
P-lYtc-IMIc and Sllr%tl~-kly lm-lt,t
(S~erel~sk
11olytechnic Institute). T~ve, Con!vmuce
vu 6;~orw,l by 1w lart-Utt of
Cn-l-try A_q t=R (A,tlng tllrect~r - A.S.
t" V*#mcvu2rw're L'Jmlct-4k-
ob.h,h.rt~. 1.. 0.2. K,,.A,ley.,& Ct-1-1
So,_-..ty D.I.
MenIeleye,), -4 the G,-d.rt--rf L--I"
ottich-kly
1I.1. V-11.va (Ot.t. 'O~d- or be.ie"
cp-.i,.i iottit.t. j-.i v.i.
The 15 of V.c Corftr~~.. t,, A
Center for th- rjr~r rf ce-ordimtInt Lh~
rezcarv~~ m glats, to pzbllbh 4
porlWical vnl-r V,e title "rielk* 1
thlmly. 0-wics -1 Ch-Istry c!'
Glavo), sod to 3.1. th- C.,it", on 01-c.
T- -:-av
A.06. Ac.4-teSan, Frore.,o~, &M C--lmam
or.0, o' C-
aitt-, Y-OL. twtc~ or Phrlea -I
Psth,-tic,.. X-',,r of t."
Or&*_',l7mtlmft1 CMmitt--; ami R.I..
YrAlr, Ductcr c~ Che- 't&l f~cl-aevb,
V~~-r
of the C~lttee. I*kw tmrj v-l& r.14.
barttnev,
N.V. Vol-k.nzhteyn, L.7 . N~Al.a, 0.11.
A~by~,.Jr, S.K. D,,' -o. V.A. lare, &.1
N.T. Kolomly.t.. Ptefere-- "comj-j rel-U.
vit.mo- st.t~ SWI '50)5
Urtenc,.
G.P.. 11
147
153
eltic&I F-.-u.' &!.I
ztr,wz~ Of
Tlorlnsknys, V.h., -I L.S.
1- tcki-. St~d~i cf C1-4
cry.t.11-m-.1c,'
P.Cdxte of the
?i~WO-SSOZ Eywt- ',,y thr :ufza~d
sjtctr~c~lc xit%ol
157
V.A. D,fr-ItJ
P,fllltl~. Scd-5111c.te G!".-
T."r %.
rt-t~.
IT7
Ale"~y-, A.G. St.dy Of CIM.
Crpt.11!-tion Frol.ct. of Ile
%~'O-Sloz Uy.t- ty, te, X-14'y
Dlff...Ctl- KeLnol
194
bobwl.h, U.S.,
6:0 T.F. Tulut. C-1,1.*Ll-
Zcatterl.-,; of Lt&ht
IF--" spc~t-j
-5 or 5- s.11C. G1--
193
Kolesms, Y.A.
Stt04 cf tl~ Sl.,&ztre of Alksli
AI=l-Z.IIICLt* GIMVeS
%,y 7.~Ir
lfmrcd 1.1~40,ptlm
2o3
C'-d gm
ut-" S-.t. (cwt.) SIN,~035
Pt-vin, Tf.p.. ?.A. ssecrots N.R.
S~olty, Enl V.P.
C--.1nov. fill-reticn si-trA ~i
st-twe of 01~4-romibg Ozlde& In
CrystAlline ~d vltm~ls stttes 201
aid ~_ T-k. Molev~lur Lt-~twre w~l
Tr(~Jertlcz of Cry~tmlline q~&rt% 213
V-kno~.klkl" !;.M., "! "'.P.
Cher-ILn~v. Stu%, of v,i Etruct~ of
L~M
ao-L. ,d Pl=,th Fcmt- GI-I., vith
1,- Add of Ifr~d Sj'ctmlcO;7 219
Vl--, A.C. Q-tit.ti- C-r.l.tl- f tht
Q~d~,! Mace.
1. 01". 222
bm:!yk'y~is, G.O., w--d A.C.
Alekrtyvv. Elvetron Nffm:tlon Ct-~!4
of
VjtMQj9 SJIJCS Wil JA~l SlIlCttt
CIA-3 226,
A.I. r-tt,rl,-;- Of Llg%t 1. Cl-s 2W
Tlt"C'JS State
A.A-y-, X.r., Y.I. A,. c.,- 0, the
R,j, or Inter-
V..r;,. P-L. 'f mo~ljlty or Coti-.
~ld the
A, vf L". 1--ft=
245
LO". ElTct'l-l C-!~Jctjvity
Zt-~t!' J~--t'jc ,,,
.J~ -d .,' (;I-,. Str-t-e 2-, 1
Cf CI"4a'tllltY of Cl-Ml. t., the
X-t!-l Cf P-~ntflm L-t'l, l1';! 254
C&" 11122
Vltr"~ state (Ct,,t. m/50,5
T.J.
t~;-Unc~ of r.1-tic P~,~rt!e. of
GI-Lts c,
.1145
Color or Glaceep w-~
r~frcct of
Ykr.Si., V.V. Color of
Clue ani Eff"t of
345
Orlm, X.?.
lt*l* Of AWRtUro$ "I
rryctglll;%-,ty of retVOrk In
Fhtft~--'- Cf
Q7~rtx 01"A -.IvtirC U,47r the
Acttoo of OtN--e hays
346
V-11-'
V.P., " N.V. rvr1.'-Th. VA-Ittlan
it the AbIc-Itio, tretl-
01"oes or
ril.;Ir Co.;~..Ittw V;.~mr th~
Artim of Cr=, F,qi
351
pr*~Wwhlkh'
8.m. Do the PxVIC.-re of to tbe
lnfl~~.ce
or ?~&Iomctl" W-IMLIcna
355
K*rs:,t7&n, D.C. U.'rCt Or 01"S
StMCtllft on the G;-ctrMl end
Ch"lCL1
Tm;,rtl~3 of C.rl,,;4 Ime
36a
cm-d 15122
Vltreo~ StWA (Cmt.) gov/5035
A-,~Qv, K-?-, T-T- S-b- CrecM=-,
t-,1 V.A. Lyut,cdft-YJy.
stmct~n* ~z pro-.rtle. or 02"ce* >6~
VI"Oft, X-Z-, 7--l- C~3mt, nod A.A.
Ab.2r;ti- rjtct~ of tb.
CO 24 Iom " the CWrell"tion Inl1Wor
Of toron ex--d In Zillch
Claues -va
VuZin, T-T-, 9=1 ?-I. Veynl~crr-
Color 0.0 Clrj~e, In C~ntctlm WItb
ftmtt~ 372
DI.C-Ion 3TT
Keebwdeal earl Same TecbaScftl
P~ron~rtjea a.- Cletres
bart-v, G.W. gtr=tu~. Gad
Y-ecb~lcml Prc7.rtlep of GI-4 e-ja
Cj~%,q
-fiver- 330
KO-I-k"S' yq.1. rl"tic T~.~rtje. of
0"Me. 1. rtll.%I~' t' YJT
Cua If/;2
'C"
vltmc~ls -'*.4.. 1 .t.)
ANIAnms. ".
K*c?AALcnI Pro,"rtl,, Or GIM- rntr.
3A
Ut~bYl'OVAY*, VOL-, r~-S T.Y.
Trrvx~. On Or Incra=' c
Quiets W-1
Xe-iml T'. - Z.
39,55
N'te", M'
DIttmi-InC t~- Dc~'ItY "i VI-coelty
In TV" tcr 11=41
Jc- G1-- 26 111 In
tLe Tr%n.-fci-.ttI= A-C:.
39J
Tmo~et-* X.T- 1x;-t"0c of the
CIW9-For,.!n_ Mt~c in t1m rcmntien
cf
tb- CIrUnle 20,T -1d C-c-t C110or
T.r.014.ye-, Te.T. Ct~A, of y_j,.6
or Ff'-rilett-It
OxWo
407
r".nw, V.A.
qtmct~ Of DIM., "d tht Jiat- of
roltrr.-IZ It Wit,,
14t.18
412
vloc~.Im
415
C.rd 17/22
SOV/1?9-59-2-25/40
AUTHORS:Barte v
ne
1 -0 ,, Rczanova, V, 1. (Moscow)
TITLE: Thermal Endurance and Strength of Glass
(Termostoykost' i
prochnost' stekla)
PERIODICAL: Izvestiya Akademii nauk SSSR OTN, Mekhanika i
mashino-
stroyeniye, 1959, Nr 2, pp 159-162 (USSR)
ABSTRACT: The paper is a continuation of previous work (Refs
3;6),
inwhich the maximum thermal stress developed on two-sid d
cooling of a glass plate was calculated. This solution
shows that the thermal stress attains a maximum value with
time (SM), and the thermal endurance is defined as
AY ='- P(l - 11~ 1 (1)
PE haSm
where F, Ii I P I E I h and a are respectively the
ultimate strength, the Poisson's, ratio, the coefficient of
thermal expansion, the Young's modulus, the coefficient of
heat emission and the half-thickneBS Of the glass. The
thermal endurzince of a number of specimens was measured on
cooling in air and in water. The effect of thickness Iof
hardening and of annealing was investigated, and the results
Card 1/2 are presented in the form of graphs. The character
of the
SOV/179-59-2-25/40
Thermal Endurance and Strength of Glass
I rupture is described both for annealed and for hardened
glass, and photographs are reproduced showing various
hardened glasses aZtea? fracture. There arv 7 figures and
7 references, of which 5 are Soviet and 2 English.
ASSOCIATION: Institut stekla (Glass Institute)
SUBMITTED: March 29, 1959 .
Card 2/2
.4
05273
24(6) SOV/170-59-7-4/20
AUTHORS- Bartenev, G.M., Tsepkov, L,P.
TITLE: On Testing Strength of Glass
PERIODICAL- Inzhenerno-fizicheskiy zhurnal, 1959, Nr 7, pp 20 -
28 (USSR)
ABSTRACTI: Inorganic.glass Is an ideal material for checking the
theory of elasti-
city. The methods of testing which have been applied so far are,
however,
not very well substantiated, and the data available in
literature are
contradictory. The authors analyzed the tests of flat glass for
trans-
verse and symmetrical bending under statical load$. The checking
of
formulae of the material strength theory for transverse bending
was made
by Frokht, Koker and Faylon CRefs 9,10-7 on glass specimens of
the beam
type. However, according to N.M. Belyayev, when the ratio of
beam thick-
ness to its span d/L-,-' 1/5, it works as a plate, and
calculation condi-
tions should be changed. The authors carried out tests of both
rigid and
elastic glass plates, and the results are compiled in Table 2. A
conclu-
sion drawn from these tests is as follows: formulae applied for
calcula-
ting the strength and the magnitude of arising stresses in tests
for trans-
verse bending, hold for rigid and elastic plates, provided that
deflections
Card 1/3 do not exceed the thickness of the plate. The tests for
symmetric bending
On Testing Strength of Glass
05273
SOV/170-59-7-4/20
were carried out to determine the strength of the surface of
glass
plates. A series of tests with a freely supported plate on a
square
and on a round support, subjected to a load concentrated in the
center,
were performed. For the case of a square plate on a square
support
there are 3 different formulae proposed by Timoshenko ZR-ef 1g,
Roark
,CRef lg and Markus (Ref 157. As can be seen from the results of
tests of a square plate with a square support, presented in
Figure 2,
Markus' formula holds with an accuracy of �10% for the plates in
which
D < 1/6 a, where D is the diameter of the drill core, and a is
the side
of the square support. At D >1/6 a, Roark's formula yields
better
results. For the case of a round plate on a round support, best
results
are yielded by Formula 7,proposed by Timoshenko, provided that
D7 1/4 a.
The authors investigatedmoreoveran effect of the edges in tests
for
symmetrical bending. Their conclusion is that the edges should
extend
by 1 to 2 d beyond the support. The shape of the plate should
correspond
to the contour of the support. In the conclusion the authors
thank S.N.
Card 2/3 Zhurkov, Corresponding Member AS USSR for discussing
the present in-
On Testing Strength of Glass
05273
SOV/170-59-7-4/20
vestigation.
There are; 2 graphs, I diagram, 1 photo, It tables and 18
references, 12
of which are Soviet, 4 English, I French and 1 German.
ASSOCIATION: Gosudarstvemyyna;chno-issledovatellskiy institut
stekla (State Scientific
Research Institute for Glass), Moscow.
Card 3/3
BARTENEV, G.ka.-. GORBATKINk, Tu.A.
Some regularities in tbovitrification of rubber. Vysokopi.
sond. I no.5:769-775 W '59. (aiRk 1-,!:10)
1. Moskovskly pedagogichesKy institut im. V.P.Potemkina. A
(Rubber)
BARTMOV, G.M.; STYRAN, Z.Ye.
i--
of the temperature and degree of croes link7-tge on the
frictional
properties of elastomers of the rubber type. Vysokom.eoed.
I no.7:978-
989 J1 159. (MIRA 12:11)
1. Nauchno-isaledovatellskiy institut rezinovoy
prouqablek-inosti.
(Slastomera) (Polymers)
BARTENZY, G.M.; ZAYTSEVA, V.D.
Mechanical vitrification and the activation energy of
rubberlike
polymers. Vysokom. soed. 1 no-9:1309-1318 S '59.
WU 13;3)
l.Nauchno-iosladovatellskiy institut rezinovoy
promy-shlennosti.
(Rubber) (Polymers)
15(9) SOV/69-21-1-1/21
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G.M. and Novikova, N.M.
TITLE: The Percussion Deformation of Rubber (Dqformatsiya
reziny pri udare).
PERIODICAL: Kolloidnyy zhurnal, 1959, Vol XXI, Nr 1, pp 3-8
(USSR)
ABSTRACT: Ye. V. Kuvshinskiy and Ye. A. Sidorovich ireference 51
developed a method of determining the elastic proper-
ties of rubber during percussion ' and proposed s~theo-
ry of a method which pormits the detemination from
experimental data of two independent constants of
rubber, the dynamic elastic modulus and the angle of
mechanical losses. A pendulum elastometer, described
in detail, was used for the experiment. As a result
of graphic and analytical calculations, the authors
found that at a permanent'initial. percussion speed, a
proportional correlation between the kinetic energy
and the square of the percussion deformation occurs.
The coefficient of this proportionality is called a
Card 1/2 "Percussion modulus". The correlation also holds for
The Percussion Deformation of Rubber SOV/69--:--21-1-1/21
JLow temperatures, so that the frost stability can be
estimated by the sharp change in the percussion modul-
us. The names of M.M. Reznikovskiy and E.L.Chdrnya-
kova. are also mentioned in the article. There are 7
graphs, 2 diagrams and 8 references, 5 of which are
Soviet and 3 English.
ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-Issledovatellski;f institut rezinovoy
promysh-
lennosti (The Scientific Research Institute of the
Rubber Industry), Moscow.
SUBMITTED: June 10, 1957.
Card 2/2
SOV/69-21-3-1/25
5(4)
A13THORS: Bartenev, G.M. and Yeremeyeva,A.S.
.......... 1~
TITLE: The Structure and Structural-1,11echanical Properties of
Inorganic Glasses
PERIODICAL: Kolloidnyy zhurnal, 1959, Vol XXI, Nr 3, pp 249-256
(USSR)
ABSTRACT: The author reports on some experiments intended to de-
termine the 'structuro-mechanical properties of inorganic
glasses. According to the Soviet scientist P.A. Rebin-
der, diffractional methods whioh prove so useful for
the investigation of crystalline matter, are of little
value for the study of disperse phases, high polymers,
organic and inorganic glasses. The study of the struc-
tuml-mechanical properties of inorganic glasses, i.e.
particularly of silicate glasses,-,is, therefore, of
great importance for theascertainment of the struct-
ure of these very complic:ated materials. The author's
experiments have shown that at certain temperatures the
Card 1/3 structural frame of inorganic glasses is little re-
SOV/69-21-3-1/25
0
The Structure and Struotural-Ilechanical Properties of
Inorganic
Glasses
sistent and easily disinteGrates under light loads, but
that it is partially restored after their removal. The
main reason for the solidification of viscous glass,
when cooled, is the process of vitrification. The ag-
gregation process and the thermal history, hoi%,evor,
play an important role in the formation of the glass
structure, which appears in the change of mechanical
behavior of sainples of the same glass sort. The author
maintains that inorganic glasses (massive glasses and
glas.-,, fibers) occupy a position intermediate between
thixotropic colloiL'al systems tind high polymers. This
assumption is based on the behavior of inorganic glas-
ses above the softening temperature and requires 1) the
presence of a temperatu~re region of deformation of the
elastic type, differing from the high elastic deforma-
tions observed below the softenin- temperature, and 2)
the presence of thixotropic properties. The structu-
ration processes above the vitrification tempera-
Card 2/3 ture lead to the formation of a network,
-0V/69-21-3-1/25
0
The Structure and S true tural-Me chani c al Properties of
Inorganic
Glasses
the elements of which are evidently chains. In addi-
tion to the above-mentioned Soviet scientist the fol-
lowing names, which are all covered by references, are
mentioned in the article: V.V. Tarasov, G.M. Bartenev,
A.I. Bovkunenko, A.F. Zak and Yu.P. Man'ko. The ar-
ticle was delivered as a report at the Fourth All-
Union Conference for Colloidal Chemistry, Tbilisi,
1958. There are 10 graphs, 1 table and 16 references,
13 of which are Soviet, 2 English and 1 French.
ASSOCIATION: Gosudarstvennyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy
institut
stekla, ],*oskva (State Scientific Research Glass In-
stitute, M'oscoiv)
SUBIL.ITTED: 19 April, 1958
Card 3/3
OWNER
Aq
all'
H i
-13. 113 !1 1 H
3 11 1 1
14 24 P. I
.11 Ali
BMIM, Georgiy Nikhayloviche prof,,, doktor khim.nauk.
Prinimale,
S.G., kand.takhn.nauk. SILIVISTROVICH,
s.I.. nauchnyy red.; MKITSOVA, X*11*9 red.lzd-ve;
SHX=IWA.
N.Y., takhn.red.
[Xechanical properties and the heat treatment of
glass] Xekhani-
cheekle svoistva i toplovaia obrabotka stekla. Xoskva,
Gos.izd-vo
lit-ry po stroit., Arkbit. i stroit.materialam, 1960.
165 p.
(MIRA 1318)
(Glass manufaoture)
S/081/61/000/024/082/086
B101 B110
AUTHOR: Bartenev, G, M.
TITLE: Interdependence of the structure of rubber and its
friction
coefficient
PERIODICAL: Referativnyy zhurnal. Khimiya, no. 24, 1961. 584 -
585,
abstract 24P430 (Tr.,3-y Vses. konferentsii po treniyu i
iznosu v mashinakh, v. 2. M., AN SSSR, 196o, 7 - 14)
TEXT: The authors demonstrate the passage from the equation
for the
frictional force F given by the theory of rubber friction on
smooth sur.-
faces to empirical equations relating the friction coefficient
to the
load. The reduction of the theoretical equation which is
admissible for
the sliding velocities v>O.lmm/hr shows that the dependence of
F on
temperature and on v comprises three constants (0, S k' U)
that are
determined by the rubber structure. a depends on the rubber
hardness,
especially on the density of the vulcanization network and
determines the
nature of the formation of Sf, the actual contact area under
load. In
narrow ranges a is inversely proportional to the rubber
equilibrium
Card 1/2
S/081/61/000/024/082/086
Interdependence of the... B101/B110
modulus. a is independent of the type of the base and of v. S
k is the
effective contact area between rubber chain and based U is the
activa-
tion energy which depends on the molecular forces of adhesion
between
rubber chains and base, i.e. on the nature of the frictioning
surfaces..
C - F/Sf, the tangential stress at the contact area caused by
the
frictional forces can be determined from Sk and U, A method is
given of
determining Sf, [Abstracter's notes Complete translation]
Card 2/2
8,1483
AUTHOR: Bartenev, G. M.
% --w--VjMWxxVfiM-AM-"
TITLE: High Stability of Glass Fibers
S/191/60/000/001/004/015
B016/BO54
PERIODICAL: Plasticheskiye massy, 1960, No. 1, pp. 21-24
TEXT: The author reports on his attempt of producing thi--k
glass fibers
with the same strength peculiar to thin glass fibers (below
15~k diameter).
Fig. 1 shows one of the most important properties of glass
fibers on the
basis of the author's data: the dependence of tensile
strength on diameter
and length of continuous non-alkaline glass fibers. Fig. 2
shows the
change in strength during pickling with HF. This pickling
eliminates, in
part, the surface faults of fibers, and increases, in part,
the strength,
but without leading to perfect results. The author clarified
the inter-
relations of the individual physical factors which are
responsible for the
strength of glass fibers. He states as follows; glass fibers
have a di-stdn,,,t
anisotropy of the effect of sample size: the fiber length
has an effect
on strength different from that of the diameter. The
physical causes of
Card 1/3
High Stability of Glass Fibers S/191/60/000/001/004/015
B016/BO54
this phenomenon are different. The statistical theory of
strength givi',s
no sufficient explanation. But it explans very well the spread
of test
results (Fig. 1 ) , and the dependence of strength on the f i
ber length. The
main physical factor ensuring the high strength of the fiber is
the ir-
reversible viscous deformation attaining some million percent.
No clear
statement can be made at present on the kind of solidifying
mechanism in
connection with the viscous flow. The author assumes that the
strength in-
creases due to a reduction of faults by irreversible viscous
deformation.
These faults become smaller by the I-a-fold (a - degree of
extension - 1+F-;
F, = viscous deformation). This makes the surface faults less
dangerous.
Further, the author assumes that during drawing the solid bonds
(due to
the orientation of chain structures) are oriented along the
fiber axis.
Thus, the material strength increases in the direction of the
fiber axis
with the degree of extension. Though these two factors affect
the glass
solidification during drawing, the author does not know exactly
which nf
the two is more important. He recommends the following measures
to in-
crease the strength of glass fibers: 1) The use of spinnerets
of larger
diameters. At a higher drawing velocity, 15 , 20 p diameter
threads can
Card 2/3
87h88
High Stability of Glass Fibers S/191/60/000/001/004/015
B01 (')/BO'-,,4
be produced with a strength characteristic of thin fiber,3.
111-oduction
becomes much more efficient. 2) The development of a
production and
operation procedure for glass fibers eliminatine the
formation of a
deficient surface layer. The author mentions the Laboratoriya
anizotropnykh struktur AN SSSR (Laboratory of Anisotropic
Structures of
the AS USSR), the Institut Stekla (Glass Institute), and the
Institut
Steklovolokna (Institute of Glass Fibers), as well as hi!3
L,wn study with
A. N. Bovkunenko (Ref. 1), and papers by B. B. Chechulin
(Ref. 3), and ;1j j\
A. K. Burov and G. D. Andreyevskaya (Ref. 6). There are 4
figures and
6 references: 3 Soviet, 1 US, 1 Swedish, and 1 Japaneiie.
Card 3/3
BARTMW, G.M.; KHAZAIIOVICH, T.N.
High elasticity deformation law for network
polymers.
Vysokom.soed. 2 no.1:20-28 A 160, (14IU 13:5)
1. Moskovskiy pedagogicbeski7 institut im.
Potemkina i Inatitut
khimichaskoy fizikl AN SSSR.
(Polymers) (Rubber)
81607
S/1q0j60/OO2/O2/o6/oii
/'?00o B004/Bo6i
ADTHORS: Bartenevp,q~,_M.., Lavrentlyev, V. V.
TITLE: The Nature of "Static" Friction in Rubber-like Polymers
PERIODICAL: Vysokomolekulyarnyye soyedineniya, 1960, Vol. 21 go, 29
pp. 238-242
TEXT: After measurements with a pendulum tribometer, the latter author
came to the conclusion that static friction exists in rubber as in
solid bodies (Ref. 10). But later tests showed (Fig. 1) that this method
was not accurate enough to determine static friction in highly elastic
materials. The initial friction is greatly influenced by the duration
of the previous contact between rubber and steel. Therefore, a contact
time of exactly three minutes was maintained in the following experiments
carried out with a tribometer from the Institut rezinovoy promyshlennosti
(Institute of the Rubber Industry). When a tangential force is applied
t6 the sample, it not o-My slides# but an elastic, reversible deformation
also occurs, whose magnitude depends on the thickness of the sample
Card 1/2
82607
The Nature of "Static" Friction in S/190/60/002/02/06/011
Rubber-like Polymers B004/BO61
(Fig- 3). Fig. 2 shows that the results were affected by
the hardness
of the dynamometer. The values are only conditional as
they depend on the
accuracy of measurement of the sliding and on the
velocity of the
tangential force applied. If, however, the rubber sample
is firmly
attached to the base'9the elastic deformation can be
determined, and this
factor can be disregarded in the results (Fig. 4).
Strictly speak'ing,
the rubber undergoes no static friction, but for
practical purposes the
initial friction can conditionally be regarded as static
friction. There
are 4 figures and 11 references: 4 Soviet, 4 US, 2
British, and 1 German.
ASSOCIATION: Xoskovskiy pedagogicheskiy institut im.
Potemkina
(Moscow Pedagogical Institute imeni Potemkin)
SUBMITTED: October 18, 1959
Card 2/2
84505
IS-21 21D 110% 1408- S/190160/002/004/005/020
B004/BO56
AUTHORS; Bartenevp Go M., Yeremeyeva, Ao So
TITLE. Mechanical Properties of Inorganic Glasses Within the Range
of Anomality, and Their Structure
PERIODICAL: Vysokomolokulyarnyye soyedineniya, 1960, Vol. 2f No. 4,
pp. 508-513.
TEXT: The authors investigated the behavior of glass rods in the
temperature range 0 - 9000C. The samples were subjected to torsional
or bending stress. A Table gives the mechanical characteristic values
of the following kin's of glass: marblitep (VV, vertically drawn
glass), VP -5 (TP -5,Vrich in lead), IK-3 (K-3,11"borosilicate glass), 13-B
(13-V, glass p~oorin alkali), tA -18 '~Ts-18, glass rich in zirconium),
barium-1 tbium glass I .3C-5K (ZS-V,~ borosilicate glass), )C--5Na
(ZS-,r-Na,Nkborosilicate glass), i~,;-116 (F-116Vphosphate glass), optical
glasses of the t)ypes ~ -1 (P-1)'and K-8 (K-8), and, for comparison, the
organic glassesTCKC,-30 (SKS-30)t ebonite, and plexiglas. As the authors
Card 1/3
84505
Mechanical Properties of Inorganic Glasses S/190/60/002/004/005/020
Within the Range of Anomality, and Their B004/BO56
Structure
observed an arbitrary and spontaneous deformation in a previous work
(Ref, 5)1 the samples were heated before being stressed, in order to
bring about relaxation. Fig. 1 shows the data for the torsion
(torsion
angle !p - f(tOC)); Fig. 2 the data for the bending stress (sag In
relative units as a function of temperature). Fig. 3 shows the
kinetic
deformation curves at various temperatures, and Fig- 4 the arbitrary
deformation of glass during heating. From these experimental data
the
authors arrive at the following conclusions: The mechanical
properties
of inorganic glasses in the temperature range of the anomaly
(between
vitrification- and flow temperature) are different for large and for
small stresses. In the case of a low stress, highly elastic
deformations
occur like in polymers. Herefrom, conclusions are drawn as to a
chaln-
like structure. As the plastic range depending on the steric
structure
is very narrow, glass behavea like a highly viscous liquid under
high
stress (of more than 1 kg/cm2). The glass contains two kinds of
residual
stress; elastic stresses as a consequence of quenching, and "frozen"
highly elastic stresses which manifest themselves by arbitrary
deformation
Card 2/3
84505
Mechanical Properties of Inorganic Glasses
s/igo/6o/002/004/005/020
Within the Range of Anomalityp and Their B004/BO56
Structure
during heating. The thermal pretreatment influences the
structure and the
mechanical properties of glass within the range of the anomaly.
In this
range, the glasses exhibit also weak thixotropy. These reversible
processes of structural re-formation have as yet not been
explained. On
the basis of their highly elastic and thioxotropic properties,
the glasses
are similar in their mechanical behavior with polymers, on the
one hand,
and thixotropic colloids, on the other, and therefore have a
complex
structure. According to their composition and pretreatment, both
chain-
like and colloidal structures with distinct mici:oheterogeneity
were
observed. The authors mention papers by P. A. Rebinder (Refs.
1,2), P. P.
Kobeko et al. (Ref. 4), Keler and Kozlovskaya, V. A. Kargin and
T. I.
Sogolova (Ref. 6), and V. V. Tarasov (Ref. 8). There are 4
figures, 1
table, and 9 references: 7 Soviet, 1 British, and 1 French.
ASSOCIATION: Gosudarstvennyy institut stekla, Moskva (State
Institute of
Glassp Moscow)
SUBMITTED: December 24, 1959
Card 3/3
83472
S/190/60/002/009/002/0-19
q'i 004 B004/BO60
AUTHORS% Zayt8eva, V. D., Bartenev, G. M.
TITLE: The Effect of Ingradients on the Resis~Anoe of Rubber
to Frost During Repeated Deformations P
PERIODICAL: Vysokomolekulyarnyye soyedineniya, 1960, Vol. 2, No. 9,
PP- 1301-1308
TEXT: In the introduction, the authors discuss the
publicatione'dealing
with the resistance of rubber to frosWalong with the action of
plastici-
zers, and mention papers by S. I. Z kov (Ref. 1), V. A. Kargin and
Yu. M. Malinskiy (Ref. 2), A. P. Aleksandrov and Yu. S. Lazurkin
(Ref.1i).
They state that vitrification had so far not been studied
thoroughly under
dynamic conditions, and then report on their experiments. The
apparatus
designed by Aleksandrov and Gayev at the Institut rezinovoy
promyshlenrosti
(Irstitute -0fth...RMbb.er Industry) was used for the purpose.
Samples of
\4 butadiene styren-a ru-b-be-r CKr--30 (SKS-30), butadiene
nitrile rubber/S-
C-Kvt-40 (SKN-40), and pyridine rubber M51T!S~~K Were rhythmically
sub-
jected to a stress of 1.8 kg/CM2 in a temperature range between
-100 and
Card 1/3
83472
The Effect of Ingredients on the Resistance of
B/190/60/002/009/002/019
Rubber to Frost During Repeated Deformations B004 B060
+20cC with 0 - 0.1, 1, 10, 100, and 1000 cycles/min. The rubber
samples
were masticated with dibutyl phthalate (DBP), diootyl sebacinate
(DOS),
tricrewyl phosphate (TKP), paraffin oil, or "Renatsit", and
vulcanized
with 2~ of sulfur. Carbon black or chalk was used as a filler.
The
variation of the coefficient k of resistance to frost was
examined at the
five frequencies specified, and from the curves obtained the
authors
determined the temperature T O'l and T0,6 , at which deformation
amounted
to 10 or 60%j of the deformation at 2000, respectively (k - 0~1
or
k - 0,6). As is shown by Fig. 1, deformation in MVPK is a linear
function
of the softener content. Table 1 supplies data of T O'l for DBP,
Table 2
for DOS. Fig. 2 shows the approximately linear function logo -
f('/T).
Thence the authors calculated the value U1, which had been
defined in an
1 0
earlier paper (Ref. 15) and which is a function of the
activation energy.
As is illustrated in Fig. 3, this value drops with rising
softener content.
Fig. 4 shows U1 as a function of T Fig. 5 shows the effect of an
0 o,6*
addition of carbon black (up to 5Cr-X by weight), Fig. 6 that of
chalk (up
to 150'/" by weight) on deformation, and Fig. 7 the effect of
30% by weight
Card 2/3
83472
The Effect of Ingredients on the Resistance of
S/190/60/002/009/002/019
Rubber to Frost During Repeated Deformations B004/B06O
of carbon black on T O'l in the case of SKS-30 rubber.
IheAuthors arrived
at the following conclusions: The effect of plasticizerswis
greater with
polar rubbers than with nonpolar rubbers. The difference
between polar and
nonpolar rubbers becomes manifest in a different action of the
softeners
at high and low deformation frequencies on the intermolecular
structure
and the resistance to frost. When using carbon black or chalk
as a filler,
vitrification shifts toward higher temperatures. The
simultaneous intro-
duction of carbon black and plasticizer lowers the resistance
to frost
with rising carbon black content. The filler increases the
rubber hardness
and, thus, lowers the resistance to frost. A paper by V. A.
Kargin and
G. L. Slonimskiy is mentioned (Ref. 14). There are 7 figures,
2 tables,
and 15 references: 10 Soviet, 2 British, 2 US, and 1 German.
ASSOCIATION: Fauchno-issledovatellskiy institut rezinovoy
promy-
shlennosti (Scientific Research Institute of the Rubber
Industry)
SUBMITTED: January 23, 1960
Card 3/3
85419
AUTHORS:
TITLE:
PERIODICAL:
S/190/60/002/0111/0-6/027
B004/BO6O
Bartenev, G. M., Kongarov, G. S.
Determination of the Compatibility of Polymersiby the
Dilatometric Method
Vysokomolekulyarnyye soyedineniya, 1960, Vol. 2,.. No. !1"
pp. 1692 - 1697
TEXT: The authors discuss several methods of determining the
compati-
bility of polymers, part of which are too complicated, while
others. .:. .
yield no more than indirect data. Proceeding from a paper by
K. Floyd
(Ref.6), the authors carried out tests on shrinkage as a
function of,
temperature and in thin way obtained a simple method of
determining the
compatibility. The latter is based on the condition that two
compatible
components have a single vitrification temperature, wherea's
mixturd'd
from incompatible components have several vitrification
temperatures,
namely, those of their components. A prerequisite of the new
method is
that vitrification.temperaturea be not too close to one
another.
Shrinkage as a function of temperature was reeorded by a
dilatometer
Card 1/3
85419
Determination of the Compatibility of
Polymers by the Dilatometric Method
S/19 60/002/011/016/02
B004YBo6o
designed by G. M. Bartenev and V. 1. Gartsman. Various mixtures
from
vulcanized rubber samples were tested. 1 HK OIK natural rubber
(vitrification temperature (VT) - -, 720 C),With CKS
(SKB)Orabber
VT - -480C)t 2) NK with CKH-26 SKN-26 brubber (VT - - OC); 3)
CKH-18
MN-18) rubber (VT.,- -480C) with CKH-40 (SKN-40) rubber (VT
-.230C);
4) polychloroprenel"with SKN-40- Compatibility was observed in
mixture's
!) and 2), inasmuch as the mixtures exhibited a single VT
changing.
linearly with increasing content of one component. This is
therefore in
line with a dependence on volume concentration according to
V.A. Kargin
and Yu. M. Malinskiy7 and not a dependence on molar
concentration ac-
cording to Zhurkov. Combinations from components of mixtures 1)
and 2)
prepared by agglutination of individual components, yielded two
IT.
Vulcanizates of incompatible mixtures 3) and 4) yielded two VT
cor-'
responding to those of the components. A calculation of the
linear ex-.
pansion (or shrinkage) coefficient according to Floyd, revealed
ad "i-
vity in all mixtures within the measurement errors. The authors
thank
G~ L. Slonimakiy for a discussion. There are 6 figures and 11
ref-
erences: 10 Soviet and I British.
Card 2/3
85419
Determination of the Compatibility of S/190/60/002/0-Ifi/016/027
Polymers by the Dilatometric Method B004/BO60
ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-isaledovateltakiy inatitut rezinovoy
promyshlennosti (Scientific Research Institute of
the Rubber Industryy
SUBMITTED: May 10, 1960
Card 3/3
M t
-"10"~1VIN-jr,-2-2 NNE
M328
2 03 01.~Ll B017YE076
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G. M.t Yeremeyevap At S.
TITLE: Is Boric Anhydride a Polymer?
PERIODICAL: Vysokomolakulyarnyye soyedineniya, 1960, Vol. 2, No. 12,
pp. 1845 - 1849
TEXT: The mechanical properties of vitreous boric anhydride have been
studied above and bQlow the temperature of vitrificatio.1 and have been
found to be similar to those of organic polymers and dispersed systems
Softened vitreous B 20 3 is in a highly elastic state like organic poly-
mers. The velocity of the irreversible flow is a function of stress. The
rheologic curve of vitreous boric anhydride at 3220C is shown in Fig. 5-
Above the yield point, Newtonian flow was observed. The3heologio curve
of boric anhydride resembles the rheologic curves of dispersed systems.
Vitreous boric anhydride is a linear inorganic polymer with short
chains. V. V. Tarasov is thanked for a discussion. There are 6 figures
and 9 references: 4 Soviet, 3 US, 1 British, and 1 German.
Card 1/2
S/19 60/002/012/015/019
~Y_
86328
Is Boric Anhydride a Polymer? S/19 60/002/012/015/019
BOI 7YB078
ASSOCIATIONt Gosudarstvennyy institut stekla Moskva (State
Institute.
of Glassf Moscow)
SUBMITTEDi May 25, 1960
Card 2/2
115.211*20 2A 05
84313
S/17Y60/003/009/006/020
B019 Bo6o
AUTHORS: Bartenev, 0. M., Kolbasniko';va, A. I.
TITLE: The Effect of Prolynged High-temperature Heating
on the
Strength of Glasskl;,
PERIODICAL: Inzhenerno-fizioheskiy zhurnal, 1960, Vol.
3, No. 9,
pp. 44-47
TEXT: The authors made bending tests to study the
influence of duration
and temperature of heating on the strength of glass.
Fig. I shows the
bending strength of glass as a function of heating
temperature in the
range from 500 to 710 OC. Previous tests had shown that
there were no re-
sidual stresses left after a heating time of two hours
and a subsequent
cooling rate of ioc/minute. As may be seen from Fig* 1,
the strength of
glass is dependent not only on the temperature of the
thermal treatment,
but also on the mechanical history of the samples. When
heating over two
hours the bending strength of samples polished at the
edges is almost
doubled. Fig. 2 shows that a heating time of 5 - 6 hours
yields the
best strength factors, regardless of the mechanical
treatment. The
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84313
The Effect of Prolonged High-temperature
S/170/60/003/009/006/020
Heating on the Strength of Glass B019/BO60
character of the mechanical pre-treatment influences the
degree of strength
increase. The main factors accounting for the strength
increase, which
attained a maximum of 13.8 in 2-mm glass and a maximum of
10.2 kg/mm2 in
6-mm glass, proved to be temperature and duration of heating.
The cooling
rate had a lesser effect. Also the effect of the thermal
treatment on the
strength of the glass surface was checked on the same types
of glass., High-
temperature thermal treatment was found to cause no strength
increase
on the glass surface beyond 1O-5V8/mm2 (6-mm glass). For 2-mm
glass the
respective value is again 15.7 kg/mm 2. A. I. Ivanova (Ref.
4), 1. 1.
Kitaygorodskiy, and A. I. Berezhnoy (Ref. 5), and G. Markus
(Ref. 8)
are mentioned. There are 2 figures and 9 references: 7 Soviet
and 2 US.
ASSOCIATION: Gosudarstvennyy nauchno-issledovatellskiy
institut stekla,
g. Moskva
(State Scientific Research Institute of Glass, Moscow)
SUBMITTED: June 13, 1959
Card 2/2'
S/179/60/000/006/035/036
E081/B135
Panshin, B.I., Razumovskaya, I.V.,
AUTHORS: -_UgE~t one
and Finogenov, G.K. , (Iloscow)
TITLE: The Longevity of CrZanic Glass Under Cyclic Loading
PERIODIC,%1.: Izvestiya Akademii nauk z;56R,Otdeleniye tekhnicheskikh
nauk, Mekhanika i mashinostroyeniye, 1960, No. 6,
pp. 176-179
TE91': The paper is a continuation of previous work (Ref.4).
According to experimental and theoretical work (Refs-1-11) thA
longevity of plastics under load is expressed by the approximate
formula: T = Ae - ad' (I)
where 71~' is the longevity at constant stress (r; the constants
A and a depend on the type of material. In the present paper
the longevity of polymethylmethacrylate is investigated under
cyclic conditions, the stress cycle having a saw-tooth form, with
maximum stress cr2, minimum stress (q, and period ID; the
quantity w (r1)/(1/20) defines the velocity of increase
Card 1/ 5
S/17q/6o,/oou/oo6/035/036
LOWE135
The Longevity of organic Glass Under Cyclic Loading
or decrease of the stress. Following Bailey (Ref-7), application
of Eq.(1) to these stress conditions leads to:
(I - 1/k) cr2 V (6)
1 - exPE-a (.1 - 1/k) 0'21
for the longevity t, where V2 is the longevity at con:~tant
stress cr2, and k is the ratio a,2/a',. In terms of the
longevity CO at constant stress a0 = 1/2((r, + e2), the longevity
t under cyclic conditions is given by -'-,q.(7). The testing was
carried out in a special apparatus in pure tension at a frequency
of 10 cycles/min and at 20 OC under the condition that k had a
constant value of 10. The data are given in Fig.2, in which the
ordinate is the logarithm of the longevity in minutes and the
abscissa is the maximum stress in kg/mm2; curve I is the time
dependence of the longevity under steady stress, curve 2 is
calculated from Eq.(6) and the experimental results for cyclic
stress are shown in curve 3. The condition of variable k was.
Card 2/ 5
S/179/60/000/006/035/036
E081/E135
The Longevity of Organic Glass Under Cyclic Loading
also considered. The experimental and calculated values are
compared in Fig-3 as graphs of d0/cr(j where crO is the
average of the maximum and minimum stresses in a cycle, and (r"
is the tensile strength measured in a testing machine; curve I
i4 the time dependence of strength, curves 2. 3 and 4 are
experimental (10 cycles/min), corresponding to variable minimum
stress (rl and different constant maximum stresses cr2 of:
curve 2 - 0.9 qrj,; curve 5 - 0.8 do; curve 4 - 0.7 (fTr;
crTr = 8.6 kg/CM2. Curves 21, 3' and It' are calculated from:
t wo exp (1/4 awe) 'ro (7)
2 exp (JL/2 awe) - I
Fig.2 shows that the longevity curve for cyclic loading is not
a
simple one, and only coincides with the theoretical curve for
small times and large maximum stresses. The possible part
played by such factors as the heating of the specimen and the
occurrence of microcracks is discussed. The curves of Fig.3
Card 3/ 5
S/l7q/6o/oou/oo6/035/036
L~,08
The Longevity of Organic Glass Under Cyclic Loading
show that the larger deviations of the experimental from the
calculated curves occur at the smaller values or O'l. The
application of Bailey's method for calculating the longevity of
plastics based on the time dependence of strength leads to
disagreement with experimental data in the practically important
region involving a large number of cycles to fracture. For a
small number of cycles to fracture, the calculated and
experimental curves practically coincide.
There are 3 figures and 10 references: 7 Soviet and 3 English.
Card V 5
oo6/05/036
5/179/60/000/
E081/E135
Glass Under Cyclic Loading
The Longevity of Organic.
UNI
3
3N
2
our. 2
Fig.2
SUBMITTED: April 13, 1960
Card 5/5
U-j
'AT
3
7-777777
P
S/138/60/000/007/007/010
A05iAo2q
AUMORSt Bartenev, G.M.1 Novikova, N.M.
TITIZ: An Instrument and Method Used for the Determination of High-:~lastia
Properties of Rubber/at Low Temperature
V
PERIODICAL: Kauchuk i Hezina, 1960, No. 7, pp. 28 - 33
TECT: A method for the testing of rubber elasticity was developed and the
VWM-3 (UPKM-3) instrument (Fig. 1) des Sned by the KIIRP was applied te this
pur-
pose. It can be used for the simultaneous testing of 8 samples of different
rub-
bers by means of a special attachment designed by D.I. Smirnov and B.S. Tau Y=
Khan. The functioning principle of the attachment is described. Formula (1)
was
derived which can serV6 as the basis for the quick determination of rubber
elasti-
city at low temperature. Two factors, the frost-resistance TO.,l and the
durat!CL
of the forces acting under static deformation, T-, are taken into
consideration.
In developing the method for rubber elasticity testing at low temperatures two
possibilities had to be noted: 1) the testing of newly-processed rubber, 2)
the
testing of mass-produced rubber. The authors refer to the ISO instrument and
the
method recommended by the International Organization of Standards and point
out
Card 1/4
S/138/60/000/007/007/010
A051/AO29
An Instrument and Method Used for the Determination of Hlgh-Blastle
Properties of
Rubber at Low Temperature
that these are applicable only to the second group of mbber. The method
of the
ISO does not include the determination.of the effect of the temporary
oonditions
of deformation on the frost-resistance of the rubber and the inst-rument
does not
ensure the rapid determination of this relationship, since it can handle
only
static load conditions. The UPKM-1 instrument does not have these
disadvantages.
With this instrument the frost-resistance index at dynamic (1,500
bendings/min)
and static conditions can be determined in compression deformations. A
period of
30 see is suggested for the static tests. The design of the UPKM-1
instrument
was Improved (Ref. 3). A mixture of dry ice and alcohol served as the
coolant V/
since an alcohol medium at low temperatures does not affect the results
of the
experiments (Refs. 4 and 5). It was found that the UPKM-3 can replace 8
stand-
ard instruments since it requires less time for the test. A detailed
explanation
is given of the testing method. Using formula (1) the frost-resistance
index can
be calculated. Formulae 2 and 3 represent the frost-resistanee
coefficients for
cases of compression deformation and elastic restoration, respectively.
The lat-
ter factors k and k' are numerically equal to each other, I.e., k k'.
Figure 2
Card 2/4
S/138/60/000/007/007/010
A051AO29
An Instrument and Method Used for the Determination of
High-Elastic Properties of
Rubber it Low Temperature
shows that the two curves coincide for the temperature
depenclence of the frost-re-
sistance coefficient of commercial rubber on CP4-18
(SKN-18)v'base wider compres-
sion and at restoration. The experiments and the tests carried
out with. the UM-
3 show that it can be recommended for determining the
characteristics of rubber
used for sealing parts and in various shook absorbers. The
instrument can also be
used'~-for determining the degree of crystal formation in rubber
during cooling
without stress. Other methods do not Include the testing of
rubber for crystal-
formation which leads to a loss of the elastic properties, Just-
as in the caae of
vitrification. The problems of vitrification and crystallization
in rubber are
further discussed, describing the factors which affect the
crystallization, e.g.,
vulcanization, presence of sulfur, accelerator, amount of the
masticator, stat.,e of
tension of the rubber sample and how the crystallization affects
the density and
hardness of the rubber. The testing method for crystallization
Is explained in
detail. It usually takes from 10 to 30 days, depending on the
rate of the rubber
crystallization. The crystallization Index is taken to be the
provisional period
of crystallization, determining the time which it takes the
rubber to increase its
Card 3/4
S/138/60/000/007/007/010
A051/AO29
An Instrument and Method Used for the Determination of
High-Elastio Properties of
Rubber at Low Temperature
hardness by a factor of 2 (Fig-A). It is further pointed out
tha-, the Instrumen-,
can be used for experiments on orysta1lization determination in
rubber, which has
been subjected to preliminary tension by means of a micro-bolt
at room temperature.
Otherwise the entire procedure is similar to that of
crystallization determination
of rubber in a relaxed state. There are 4 graphs, I set of
photographs and 12 re-
ferences: 5 Soviet and 7 English.
ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-iseledovatel'skly 1nstitut rezinovoy
promyshlennosti (Scler.-__
tifio,Researoh Institute of'the Rubber InAustry)
Card 4/4
11 rig, 2z09
87919
S/138/60/000/008/005/015
A051/AO29
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G.M.; _~Zelenov, YU.V.
TITLE: The Connection Between the Coefficient of Frost-Resistance and
the
Maximum of Mechanical Losses of Rubber-Like Polymern in Repeated Ds-
formation During Vitrification
PERIODICAL: Kauchuk i Rezina 1960, No. 8, pp. 18 - 22
TEXT: A number of investigations were carried out by the authors Into
the
mechanical losses in rubbers with various properties, such as: nitrile
CKH -40
(SKN-40), butadiene -styrene CKC -30 (SKS-30) and methylvinylpyridine
HBnK (M.VPK).
The Aleksandroy-Gayev instrument designed by the NIIRP (Ref. 4) was
used, applying
the hysteresis loop method. It Is known that iA repeated deformations
under -low
temperatures synthetic and natural rubber change over from a
high-elastic sjhRtanR
to a vitrified state (Ref. 1) and this process contrary to the
struoturalizing
vitrification observed in all amorphous substances when cooled (Ref.
2) is desig-
nated here as mechanical vitrification. The frost-resistance which
depends on
this mechanical vitrification and is estimated from the temperature
relationship
of the high-elastio deformations has been carefully investigated in
previous works
Card 1/5
8793.9
S/1-:k8/60/000/008/005/015
A051/AO29
The Connection Betw6en the Coefficient of Frost-Resistance and the Maximum
of
Mechanical Losses of Rubber-Like Polymers in Repeated Deformation During
Vi-.riti-
cation
(Refs. 1,3,4). However, the changes in the mechanical losses during
vitrification
have not yet been dealt with. It is pointed out that in order to evaluate
the
frost-resistance of any article under conditiqns of repeated deformations
of a
mechanical nature, one must estimate the value of the frost-resistant
coefficient
at which the maximum mechanical losses are observed for various
rubber-like poly-
mers. The latter is also necessary in order to understand the process of
vitrifl-
cation more fully. The method used in the experimental procedure Is
outlined. vl~_
ing the hysteresis loop method the coefficient of the mechanical losses X
was derm-
mined as the ratio of the area Df the hysteresis loop to the area enclosed
within
the load curye and the deformation axis. Figure 2 is a graph of ,he
relation2hi;
between the relative hysteresis x, the tangent and the sine of the
mech&n1cal loss
angle and the temperature. It is seen that both for x, tg 6 and sing the
maxivram
is reached at about the same temperature. There is a direct proportion
between
the inverse temperature 1/rk and the logarithm of the frequency curve of
the me-
chanical force for samples subjected to perliminary mechanical forzes with
a fre-
quency of 10 osoillations/mIn and a force amplitude 2..5 ti'mez greater
than that-ah-
Card 2/ 5
;,C. KA-z.-, zlL~,
Z
-.z
87919
S/138/60/000/008/005/015
A051/AO29
The Connection Between the Coefficient of Frost-Resistance and
the Maximum of
Mechanical Losses of Rubber-Like Polymers in Repeated
Deformation During Vitrifi-
cation
ed in the measurements. It was seen that the temperature of
vitrification was
higher for samples not subjected to preliminary forces. As the
deformation fre-
quency increases, the vitrification temperature of the
non-subjected samples ap-
proaches that of the samples with a stabilized structure. It
is assumed that the
vitrification temperature drops due to the irreversible break
in the weak, second-
ary bonds during mechanical effeots and due to a decrease in
the intramolecular
action. The measurement data show that for the different
rubbers investigated the
high-elastic deformation is reached at different temperatures.
Therefore the
frost-resistant coefficient K for these rubbers is determined
from Formula 2 K90
as the ratio of the deformation amplitude 60 at a given
temperature to the Ego
amplitude of the established high-elastic deformation E... The
frost-resistant
coefficients for tho investigated rubbers could be determined
by comparing the
temperature relationships of the K and the x values of the
three rubbers which
would correspond to the maximum of mechanical loss. The
Aleksandrov meohanic~al
model with the same relaxation time was used to estimate the
value of the frost-
-resistant coefficient, corresponding to the ma.)Umum of
mechanical loss. It was
Card 3/5
87919
S/138/60/000/008/005/015
A051/A029
The Connection Between the Coefficient of Frost-Resistance
and the Maximum of
Mechanical Lobses of Rubber-Like Polymers in Repeated
Deformation During Vitr1fi-
cation
found that K W 0.1. Therefore the temperature, at which the
maximum of mechanical
losses Is observed, corresponds to the -temperature, at
which the ten-fold loss cf
the high-elasticity takes place. Thezapplication of the
mechanical model wllh the
same relaxation time is insufficient for the explanation of
the mechanical proper-
ties of the investigated materials. There are 6 figures, 7
formulae and 8 Soviet
references. 10
ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-issledovarellskiy Institut rezinovoy
promysblennosti (Scien-
t1fic Research Institute of the Rubber industry)
Card 4/5
87919
S/138/60/000/008/005/015
A051/AO29
The Connection Between the Coefficient of Frost-Resistance and the Maximum of
Mechanical Losses of Rubber-Like Polymers in Repeated Deformation During
Vitrifi-
cation
Fiore 2:
Dependence of the Relative Hyst6resis x, the Tangent and the Sine of
Mechanical
Losses on the Temperature:
X
1 -'relative hysteresis x;. r. -H
2 - tangent of the
angle
3 - '40)0 0
of mechanical losses; 4
F4 W W0
sine of the angle of me- 4) ~4 0 %_
4-1 bO 0
chanical losses to,"
0
1-4
> 4-)
4-2
(d 0 in
r4
0 b0
43 0 4-> 200 2S0 J00
.Card 5/5 Temperaturt-, OK
jig
0
S/ 19 1/60/000/008,10 14/014
B000051~
AUTHORS: Bartenev, G. :!., Anulov, V. L.
k0
TITLE: Conference on the Strength of Polymers Lnd Polymer
'materials
PERIODICAL: Plasticheskiye massy, 1960, No. 8, pp. 69-71
TEXT: From 7.:ay 16*to May 18, 1940 the soveshchaniye po
procl!nnsti D01i-
merov i polimernykh ma~erialov (Conference on the Stren~-th of
Polymers
and Polymer Iaterials PA ook place in Moscow; the follo,~,iwr
in~titntions
attended: sektsiya fiziki polimerov VKhO im. D. 1. Menlele-,evo
(Cection
of Polymer Physics of the All-Union Chemical Society iEeni D. I.
_.Vendeleyev), sektsiya poli-m-crov Nauchnogo soveta pa proble:nc
"Pivicheskiye
os~~Vy-p-r_ochnosti i plaatichnostill pri otdelenii
fiziko-t.-..-.",C--.,It;-c'-.eskikh
nauk 1.1 SIJS.",, (Section of Polymers of the Scientific Courcil
for the
Problem "The -Flhysical Basis of Strength and Plasticity" at V-e
Depart-
ment of Physical and Mathematical Sciences of the AS US'---,),
Kon-itet
prochnosti Tlauchno-tekhnicheskogo obshchestva mashinostro-itellnoy
promyshlennosti (Committee of Strength of the Scientific isnd
Technical
Society of the Machine Btiilding Industry)
nauchno-tek'.--i-n-i-c-h--e-s-k-o-y-e
Card 1/5
Conference on the Strength of Polymers s/191/6o/ooo/ooa/o14/014
and Polymer Yateriala B000056
obshchestvo legkoy promyshlennosti (Scientific and Technief-.1
Society of
the Light Industry), and the Komissiya po primeneniyu. polimerov v
masbinostroyenii Goskomiteta Soveta Ministrov SSSR po
avtoirntizc-.tsii i
mash inos troyeniyu (Commission for the Application of Polymers in
'.*Lchine
Construction of the State Committe tion and Ma-chine
'Co_n_r_,_t-r_u_crt-1-o-n_-
of the Council of Yiniste~s ~j In his opening address, 0
Slonimskiy outlined the aims of the Conference: Survey of the
development
of the theory of strength, planning of measures to be taken for the
intro-
duction of nol-.,mers in machine building, light and textile
industries.
Lectures uere delivered by the follo%ing persons: 0. 11. ?artenev of
the
ProblemnayL laboratoriya MGPI im. V. I. Lenina (Laboratory for
Problcras
of the Moscov, State Pedagogical Institute imeni V. I. Lenin), "Some
Problems of "he Strength of Polymers"; S. 11. Zhurkov, 111AL Part
Played by
Chemical anl Intermolecular Bonds in the Tearine of Polymers", on
4.iich
occasion he gave new data concerning the influence of plasticizers and
solvents upon 'he activation energy u 0 and the constants T 0 ~~nd 7
of the
Zhurkov formula. Yu. S. Lazurkin compared the equation for the tire
de-
pendence ofstrength with that for the time dependence of relaxation.
Co rd 2/5
Conference on the Strength of Polymers S/191/60/000/008/014/014
and Polymer Materials B004/B056
Ye. V. Kuvshinski and K. I. Bessonov of the IVS AN SSSR (Institute of
Macromolecular Compounds of the AS USSR) lectured on "The Interrelati
Between the Destruction of Plastica and Deformation and Splitting".
G. 14. Bartenev and V. Ye. Gulf: "On the Nature of Strength of Polymers".
Atthe MITKhT im. Lomonosova (Moscow Inst,itute-of Fine Chemical Technology
imeni Lomonosov), V. Ye. Gull successfully used time-lapse film pictures.
In his report "Creep and Strength of Polymers in Consideration of the
Effect of an Active Medium", Academician P. A. Rebinder mentioned the law
of the aftereffect discovered at the IFKh AN SSSR (Institute of Physical
Chemistry of the AS USSR), and Yu. S.-Zuyevls studies on the splitting
of rubber.-G. L.-Slonimakiy spoke about the-part played by mechanical
chemistry in polymer processing.P. V. Melentlyev of the Leningradskiy
tekstillnyy institut (Leningrad Textile Institute) renorted on "Llechanical
Tests of Polymer Materials"; M. G. Mokullskiy - on various properties of
polymers in intense irradiation. N. 1. Prigorovskiy of the IMASh AN SSSR
(Institute'of Sciences of Machines of the AS USSR) spoke about the
actuality of the research of structural strength of plastics. R. M.
Shneyderovic and V. S. Strelyayev delivered the lecture "Constructional
Factors of the Static Strength of Orientated Plastics", which dealt also
Card 3/5
-,J
Conference on the Strength of Polymers S/19 60/000/008/014/014
and Polymer Materials B/004XB056
with glass plastic!s of thgtypes Arq-c (A22h-S, 3318-C(3316-S P-49
P-50,. A. A. Rabinovich of the laboratoriya anizotrop-
and n - 50
nykh struktur AN sssR Laboratory of Anisotropic Structures of the AS
USSR) spoke abou.t some general mechanical properties of glass plastics,
V. A. Lepetov.of the Moscow Institute of Fine Chemical Technology imeni
Lomonosov lectured on the representation of the elasticity coefficients
of rubber according to the Shore hardness, and pointed out that the
tolerances of TY 233-54P (TU 233-54R) are too wide. G. I. Gurevich spoke
about the testing of-glaas plastics as to fatig~ie strength; B. I. Panshin
spoke about "The Strength and Durability of Plastics Under Permanen-
Load"; N. I. Malinin of the Sibirskoye otdeleniye AN SSSR (Siberian
Branch of the AS USSR) spoke about "Creeping and Relaxation of High-
polymers and Plastics in the Transition Stage", whicfi was discussed by
G. L. Slonimskiy. V. M. Tendler read a paper by N. Y. Chernomordik,
"The Anisotropy Angle of Glass Plastics in the Calculation of Ship
Constructions". The following persons joined in the discussion: G. A.
Patrikeye , V. 1- Xnulov of the NIIRP (Scientific Research Institute
of the Rubber Industry), L. D. Kogan of the State Committee of Automation
and Machine Construction of the Council of Ministers USSR . Further, meth-
ods of calculating filaments made from chemical fibers (K. I. Koritaki
Card 4/5
7=7777-
Conference on the Strength of Polymers
S/191j6o/000/008/014/014
and Polymer Materials B004/BO56
for the determination of the dynamic fatigue of textile
materials
(G. N. Kukin), and for the determination of the fatigue
strength of poly-
mer coatings on leather (V. I. Yeliseyeva) were discussed.
Card 5/5
BARTINNY, G,,H.; KOLBASNZOVA, A. I.
Iffect of high-temperature preheating over a long period of time:
on the strength of glass& Inzh.-flz.xhur. no.9:44-47 S 160.
(MIRL 13:9)
1. Goeudarstve=37 nauchno-is6ledovatellakly institut stekla, Moskva*
(Glass-Thermal properties)
S/191/60/000/009/005/010
B013/BO55
AUTHOR: Bartenev, G. M.
TITLE: Some Problems on Strength of Polymers
PERIODICALi Plasticheskiye massy, 1960, No. 9, pp. 48 - 53
TEXT: The present paper was read at a conference on the strength of
polymers and polymer materials held on May 16 - 18, 1960. The substances
discussed were mainly non-crystalline polymer materials, in particular,
rubber and plastics. The first problem to be discussed was the effect of
temperature on the strength of amorphous polymers during elongation
(Fig.1). The diagram in Fig.1, which is much more complicated than
A. I. Ioffe's scheme for solids, is characteristic both for rubber and
plastics. The main difference between this diagram and the latter scheme
is the introduction of two new temperature ranges between the brittle-
and the plastic region: the forced elastic range (in the region
Tbrittle-T vitrification) and the highly elastic range (between
Tvitrification and Tfusion ). These two ranges are separated by the
Card 1/3
Some Problems on Strength of Polymers
S/191/60/000/009/005/010
B013/B055
vitrification point which depends on the duration of the
test. The limit af
of forced elasticity is determined from the peak in the
elongation curve
(Fig.2). As is apparent from Figs.2 and 3, the elongation
curves in the
forced-elasticity range and the plasticity range are
similar. A plot of
the experimental data of rubber polymers is presented in
Figs.4 and 5.
These data confirm the scheme shown in Fig.l. It is seen
from this scheme
that a polymer can undergo elastic-, highly-elastic- and
irreversible
deformations (according to deformation rate, temperature
and stress). it
is generally known, specially from publications by N. S.
Zhurkov (Ref.4)
that the strength of all materials is time-dependent
(Figs.6 and 7). The
introduction of a strength limit as material constant is
only justified
in cases where it may be regarded as maximum technical
strength and is
measurable. Simultaneously with investigations on the
strength of
plastics carried jut at the laboratoriya fiziki prochnosti
LFTI
(Laboratory of Physics of Strength of the Leningrad
Physicotechnical
Institute), the time-dependence of the strength of highly
elastic polymel
materials was investigated at the fizicheskaya laboratoriya
NIIRP
(Laboratory of Physics of the Scientific Research Institute
of the Rubber
Industry) and the laboratoriya fiziki polimerov MGPI im. V.
I. Lenina
Card 2/3
Some Problems on Strength of Polymers S11911601000100910051010
B013 B055
(Laborat'ory of Physics of Polymers of the XGPI imeni V. I.
Lenin). it was
shown (Ref-7) that rubbery polymers, owing to the specific form
of time-
dependence of their strength (Fig.8) constitute a special class
of
polymer. The relation may be written in the form: pd-n, where
-r . time
at which destruction occurs under constant load 6, a
temperature-
dependent and n . a temperature-independent constant. Hard
polymers and
highly-elastic polymers differ not only in the time-dependence
of their
strength, but also in the character of destructiont Plexiglas
(Fig.9) -
CKC-30 (SKS-30) rubber (Fig.10). The questions least-studied
but most
important from the practical point of view are: the working out
of
methods for calculating maximum stress limits basing on data
from single
elongation and data obtained in static tests. Finally the
author points
out the importance of mechanochemistry, which must be taken
into account
in destruction processes of polymer materials, and discusses
the principal
difference between strength and time-dependent fatigue. Mention
is made of
Yu. S. Lazurkin, E. Ye. Tomashevskiy, A. P. Aleksandrov, V. R.
Regell,
Ye. V. Kuvshinskiy, V. Ye. Gull, Yu. S. Zuyev, V. A. Kargin,
T.I.Sogolova'
G. L. Slonimskiy, and B. I. Panshin. There are 10 figures and
25 refer-
ences:.23 Soviet, 1 US,'and 1 British.
JCOI
Card 3/3
S/138/60/000/010/005/008
A051/AO29
AUTHORS: Bartenevq G.M., Kolyadina, N.G.
TITLE: On the Packing Mechanism of Flange Joints Using Rubber Linings
PERIODICAL.- Kauchuk i Rezina, 1960, No. 10, pp, 29-34 *
TEXT: The authors conducted a study of the packing. ability of ring-
shaped linings with a rectangular cross-section compressed between groove
flanges in sharp pressure drops. The loss of airtightness of these linings
in
the flange grooves takes place by the contact mechanism but, according to
the
authorsl this phenomenon has not been dealt with sufficiently. Comparisons
were also made by studying ring-shapea linings of rectangular oross-seotion
compressed between flat flanges. Tests were made on linings with the
following
dimensionst internal diameter d - 24 mm, external diameter D - 44 mm, height
of lining h - 9 mm. The form factor(D(F) calaulated according to the formula
(D-d)4h was 0-55. The linings were prepared from 4 types of rubbele with the
following compositionss 1)CRE (SKB), carbon black (60 weight parts to 100
weight parts of raw rubber) , captax, sulfur; 2) CK-30 (SKS-30), carbon
black
(30 w.p. to 100 w.p. of raw rubber), thiuram; 3) SKS-30, carbon black (100
W.
p. to 100 w,p. of raw rubber)q altax A(bf-(DFG), sulfur; 4)CWH-26 (SKU-26)t
Card 1/.W
A
3/138/60/000/010/005/008
A051/AO29
On the Packing Mechanism of Flange Joints Using Rubber-Linings
carbon black ( 110 w.p. to 160 w.p. of raw rubber), thiuram,
sulfur. Fig. I
represents the relationship of the actual tension to the degree
of compression
of the testo& rubbers in static deformation. The tension was
measured every
3 minutes from the moment the given value of compression was
reached, The
obtained measurement data were used to calculate the-static
rubber modulus E
and lining modulus El according to the formula: El - E ( 1
+,(XF) where M =O-5
(Ref, 6). Table 1 gives the values of the moduli of the rubbers
and the linings
and also the rubber hardness according to Shore. The linings
were tested on
a stand at air pressure of 200 atm and 2000. The attachments
containing the
linings were placed into a water bath. The lack of airtightness
was noted by
the appearance of air bubbles. Fig- 3 gives the data on the
effect of the
degree of compression of the linings located between the flat
flanges on the
value of the critical working pressures (i,e,p the pressure
whereby the lining
loses its airtightness). The packing ability of the linings
compressed between
the flat flanges depends on the degree of compression and the
rubber modulus,
If the lining modulus El and the degree of compression S are
known, the speci-
fio compression load can be calculated f. E'S / (1- 6) (Ref.6).
The conclusion
Card 2/'T
5'
511381601000101010031008
A051/AO29
On the Packing Mechanism of Flange Joints Using lhbber Linings
is drawn that the'speoifio compression load of the lining is a
function of the
modulus and degree of compression of the lining and therefore
determines its
packing ability. By changing the hardness of the rubber or the
degree of
compression of the lining the necessary flange tension can be
obtained which
would determine the value of the critical working pressure in
the system of
flat flanges. The critical nature of the loss of airtightness
is explained
by the decreasing dependence of the lining's resistance on the
radial shift.
Since the resilient resistance force of the lining in the
first moment of the
radial shift is equal to zerot therefore the loss of stability
is determined
by the value of the friction force. This explains the reason
for increasing
the friction coefficient in using flange linings. Experimental
findings are
listed to confirm the conclusions drawn and to explain the
effect of certain
factors on the self-packing -phenomenon of rubber lining. The
size of the
clearance between the lining and internal wall of the caliber
was determined
mathematically. Obtained data lead to theae conolusionst 1)
self-paoking
occurs in the presence of any clearance between the lining and
the limiting
ring, but the value of the critical compression F-k depends on
the size of the
clearance. 2) With an increase in the clearance the critical
compression
Card 3/4
-5-
S/138/60/000/010/005/008
A0511A029
On the Packing Mechanism of Flange Joints Using Rubber Linings
increases (or the critical specific load of self-paoking f ).
With an increase
in the hardness of the rubber the critical compression loa f k
increases and
at zero clearance the self-paoking takes place at a load fk on
the flanges
which differs from zero and is the higher, the harder the rubber
(Fig 7). It
is stated that for linings between flat flanges under high
pressure one should
apply high-modulus rubbers. For linings in groove flanges the
low-modulus
rubbers should be used, since it is important that the packing
begin at as low
a pressure as possible on the flanges. Summarizing the
experimental results
the authors conclude that the packing of the rubber linings
compressed between
groove flanges (or with a look) at low compressions takes place
according to
the same mechanism as that of the flat flanges (loss of
stability). In high
compressions increasing with the hardness of the rubber,
self-paoking occurs.
The magnitude of the diameter clearance between.the lining and
the wall of the
groove on the side opposite to the pressure has a significant
effect on the
packing ability of the linings located between the groove
flanges. The greater
the clearance, the more the self-packing phenomenon is noted at
high
compressions. For linings located between flat flanges the
critical hydraulic
Card Or
S/138/60/000/010/005/008
A051/AO29
On the Packing Yechanism of Flange Joints Using Rubber Linings
pressure of the.loss.,of airtightness is afunction of the flange tdnsion.
(specific lor-d*of compression of the lining) and hardly depends on the type
of
rubber. In the case of linings located in the grooves the'critical woexing
pressure of self-packingto a greater extent depends on the hardness of.the
rubber and the size of the diameter clearance. There are 7 graphs, 1 table,,
l.dia-ram and 7 references: 6 Soviet, 1 English.
ILSSOCLLTION: Nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut rezinovoy promyshlennosti
(Scientific Research Institute of the 1%bber Industry)
t
Card 5/#
'p,
S/191/60/000/011/012/016
16-.gooo (A)Loi) B013/BO54
AUTHORS: Panehin, B. I., Bartenev, G. M., Finogenov, G. N.
TITLE: Strength of Plastics Under Cyclic Loads
PERIODICAL: Plasticheskiye massy, 1960, No. 11, PP- 47-54
TEXT: The present report was delivered at the Conference on the Strength
of Polymers and Polymeric Materials held in Moscow from May 16 to 18,. 1960.
It deals with studies of the strength and durability of some construction
plastics under low-frequency cyclic loads. Tables 1 and 2 give the charac-
teristic physicomechanical properties df the organic glasses and glass
textolites investigated. The following problems were clarified in the in-
vestigation: the durability of plastics under constant and variable loads
Figs. 1-3, 5); effect of temperature on the durability of plastics-
Figs. 2, 4); effect of orientation on the strength of organic glasses
~
in fatigue tests (Tables 2, 3); anisotropy of durability of glass texto-
lite (Figs. 6, 7); effect of asymmetry of cyclic loads on the durability-
of plastics (Fig. 8); effect of overloads and static preloading (Fig. 9,
Table 4);"fatiguell of the material under cyclic loads (Fig. 10). It was
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found that the relationship between durability and stress in
semilogarith-
mic coordinates was not linear under cyclic tensile loads in contrast
to
static loads. In the range of high stresses, the material is longer
durable
under syclic than under static loads on the same stress level. On low
stress levels, however, longer durability of the material corresponds
to
static loading. Under cyclic loads, the same durability of plastics
can
be attained with different values of average cyclic stresses. Here,
longer
stress amplitudes correspond to smaller average cyclic stresses. It
was
shown that an overload during cyclic loading or after prolonged static
loading reduced the durability of the material. Plastics of the
series of
organic polymethyl methacrylate glasses of linear structure with
increased
heat resistance also show a higher fatigue strength both at normal and
increased temperature. Organic glasses with oriented structure, which
were
subjected to biaxial tensile loads on heating above the vitrification
temperature, have a considerably higher fatigue strength than
non-oriented
glasses. Besides, the relative difference between the values of
durability
during fatigue tests, especially with not too high stresses, is much
smal-
ler fn oriented than in non-oriented glasses. Anisotropy of mechanical
properties of glass textolites also occurs in fatigue tests. The
durability
of glass textolite is more strongly reduced by thermal aging under
simul-
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taneous cyclicloads than without such loads. Finally, it was shown
that it
was possible to calculate the durability of plastics, especially
organic
glasses, under cyclic loads according to fatigue test data under
static
load with the use of the "criterion of total damages". It was found
that
the fatigue strength calculated did not agree with experimental-data
in
the case of small stresses. The authors attempted to find the causes
of
such disagreement (Fig. 11). They showed that the heating of the whole
sample due to hysteresis losses cannot be the principal cause. Local
overheating is assumed. M. M. Gudimov and B. V. Petrov are mentioned.
There are 11 figures, 4 tables, and 13 references: 11 Soviet and 2 US.
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AUTHORS: Bartenev, G.M.; Berestnev. V.&.
TITLE: A Conference on the Strength of Polymers\and Polymer Materials
PERIODICAL: Kauchuk i Rezina, 1960ANo. 9, pp. 57 - 58
TEff-: x0- A soveshchaniye po prochnosti polimerov 1 polimernykh materialo"Y
(Conference on the Strength of Polymers and Polymer Materials) was held in May
1960 in Moscow. It was organized by Sektslya fiziki polimerov tSection for
t:ne
Physics of Polymers) at the Central Board, of VKhO im. D.I. Mendeleyev, by the
Sektsiya polimerov (Department of Polymers) of the NaucILnyy sovet po probleme
"fizicheskiya osnovy prochnosti i plastichnosti" (Scientific Council on
Problems
of "Physical Bases of Strength and El&stici*.yr), at the Cotdeleniye
fiziko-matema-
ticheskikh nauk AN SSSR (Department of Physico-mathematical Sciencen, of the
AS
USSR), by the Homitet po prochnosti NTO mashinostroitellnoy promyshlennosti
(Com-
mittee for Stability of NTO of the machinebuildlng industry),, by NTO '.egkoy
promy-
shlennosti, (NTO of the Light Industry), by the Komissiya po p1meneniyu
polimerov
v mashinostroyenii Goskomiteta Soveta Ministrov SSSR po avtomatizatsil i
mashino-
stroyeniyu (commission for the Application ~f Polymers in Machine-Building in
the
State Committee of the V~P' -,nnil of Mirist-irs on nutomatJor. and
innu-41.1ne -build-
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A Conference on the Strength of Polymers and Polymer Materials
Ing. Papers on the following problems were submitted: the
physical and physil^o-
-chemical foundations of polymer stability, stability of
polymer materials used_
in machine-building, stability and fatigue of textiles and
polymer coatings. 1-5,
Cbairman G.L. Slonimskiy pointed out in his introductory
speech that the confer-
ence was being held the purpose of introducing physicists,
physico-chemists
occupied in the polymer branch, meehanical ergineers and
scientists in the textile
and ligh-t industries into the work carried ov.,t in these
branches. 0 M- B3rt-ne.1v
presented a*paper on ttertain Problems of the Stability of
Polymers".. He dealt
with the problems of time and temperature dependence of
stability, elaborating
the conception of "stability 21mit". S.N. Zhurkov read a paper
on "The Role of
Chemical and Intrazoolecular Bonds in t7be Rup-~;ure Tf
Polymers". Yu.S. Lazurkin
discussed the paper by Zhurkov, stating that the formula on
the temperature-time
relationship of stability is similar to the formula expressing
the dependence of
the relaxation time on the tension in the deformation process
of polymers. The
coefficients of both formulae were compared. Ye.V.
Kuvsh-inskiy and M.I. Bessonoy
presented a paper on flThe Connection of the Destnic-ulon of,
Plastics with Defor-
mation and Cracking.0 G.M. Bartenev and V.Ye. Gull read a
paper on 17r1be Nature
of the Stability of Polymers"; P.A. Rebin:Te-r-o-n7reep and
Stability of Polymers
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A Conference on the Strength of Polymers and Polymer Materials
Considering the Effect of the Active Medium." V.A. Berestnev elaborated
some of
the theoretical aspects of Rebinderes paper and their practical
application. G.L.
Slonimskiy read a paper on: "The Role of Me-,hano-Chemistry in the
Processes of
Treatment and Application of Polymers"; P.V. Melentlyev on, "Mechanical
Testing
of Polymer Materials"; M.A. nj~t 'n: "Changes in the Mechanical Properties
. 11 ~sk J 0
of Polymers in the IrradiationqProcess"; V.R. Regell on: ffArrangement of
Experi-
ments for the Study of the Connection Between Static Fatigue and
Exhaustion : J
Repeated Cyclic Stresses"; V.R. Ratner on: "Fatigue Destruction of
Plastics";
G.A..Patrikeyev on: "Macromolecular Mechanics% etc. A great deal of
attention
was gTv-en to the problem of construction properties of polymer
materials.' R.M.
Shneyderovich and V.S. Strelyavey repgeted on: "Constr6otion Factors of
Static
Stability in Orientated Glass PlastiFs"; A.L. Rabinovich read a paper on.
"Cer-
tain General Characteristics of the Mechanical Properties of Construction
Glass
Plastics". G.A. Patrikeyev criticized the last two papers, claiming that
they
had no piactical significance. Perl'sbteyn added his comments on the same
subject.
V.A. Lepqtov commented the possibility of expressing the elastic constants
of
rubber-Mi-r-ough the hardness according to Snore. B.0. Gurevich reported
on the
test results of glass plasticq in rmooth s&r4ples and in those with bore
holes.
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The paper by G.M. Bartenev, B.I. Panshin., 131.1. Finogenov and 1.V.
RazumovskaYa
contained formulae for calculating the durability of organic glass and
glass-tex-
tilite in cyclic tests. N.I. Malinin reported on "Creep and Relaxation of
Righ
Polymers and Plastics in ihe TraaslMn State". G.L. Sl.onimskiy remarked
that-the
latter paper was based only on foreign materia2. and that there was a
great, deal
more on the subject in Soviet literature. V.M. Tendler reported on N.Ye.
Cherno-
-,A41,1s paper, " The Anisotropic Angle of Glass Plastins in Designing
Ship Struc~-
zures."- G.N. Kukin reported on the importan-, role of polymers In the
textile and
light industries. K.I. Koritskiy read a paper on., "Methods :~or
Calculating the
Stability of Threads Made of Staple and Continuous Fibers." G.N. Kukin
read an- Id
other paper on: "Methods of Determining the Dynamic Faiig-je of Textile
Materials'!
V:1. Yeliseyev reported on "The Characteristics of Fa',Igue S,~ability of
Polymer
Coatings of Leather". V.A. Usenko read a paper on-. `~-Tbe Se:.P:~tion o~
the Optinm.
Value of the lwis-r~ for Threads of Various 'Fiberz,'~, A-14. Sol-c-Pye-'r
on:- ~The Effe-at
of, the Twist on the Phyeico-Mechan�sa.1 Proppert~es Cf the 7hreads"; A.A.
Rogovina *
on, "The Effe~t of the Temperature and Air Oxvgc-n on the 7hread
Durability".; Yel
G. Eyges on; Cer!;ain Changes of the Fl.ber Stni.-.ture and Thri-ads in
Fatfgae";-
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V.A. Berestnev on: "The Role of Micro and 14acrostructure in
the Destruction Pro-
jt;s-E~-~Ft-6e- Fiber", etc. Several recommendations made by
members were adopted.
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16 D034/DO02
15% %.110
AUTHORS: Zakharenko, N.V., Tolstukhina, F.S., Bartenev, G.M.
TITLE: On the Flow of Rubber-like Polymersland of- ~Their~~
Mixtures With C arbon.Blacks
PERIODICAL:
Kolloid"11rv zhu~rnal, 1960, Vol XXII, Nr 2, pp 168-
175 (USRR~
AESTRACT:
The authors report on a study of the flow of polymers
and
mixtures in a condensed phase in dependence on
temperatures and stress.
The investigation, which is
intended to clajify this process, pas carried
out on
olyisobut he types P-20,P-118 anc
Ylene%of t kits
carbon blackvmixtures, on sodium butadiene rubber
(SKB) and
its mixtures with an active Uamp black)
and an inactive filler (chalk),
and on various rubber
mixtures intended for industrial processing (shoes
etc.).
The fluidity of the materials was measured in the
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On the Flow of Rubber-like Polymers and of Their Mixtures With
Carbon Blacks
usual way (determination of strain at constant stress
within small velocity gradients). The viscosity was
measured with theplastoelastometer designed by D.M.
Tolstoy ZRef. 3 ... In this device (diagram) the speci-
men is deformed in a thin layer between two parallel
plates. The lower plate remains in a stable-position,
whereas the upper plate moves due to a load, which
acts through a pulley- in a horizontal direction. The
investigation established the existence of Newtonian
flow for polyisobutylen.9 P-?O in the range of low
yield values of from 1-02-10"- dynes/CM2. Within this
range of stresses Newtonian flow is absent'in t1fe
black-filled mixtures. The rheological curves of
complicated disperse rubber- carbon black mixtures
are described (within the studied stress limits) by
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