Development of a Phenomenological Constitutive Model for Polyurethane Foams

Year
1989
Author(s)
M.K. Neilsen - Sandia National Laboratories, USA
H.S. Morgan - Sandia National Laboratories, USA
R.D. Krieg - Sandia National Laboratories, USA
H.R. Yoshimura - Sandia National Laboratories
File Attachment
79.PDF1.89 MB
Abstract
Rigid, closed-cell, polyurethane foam is used in impact limiters in nuclear waste transport containers. During a hypothetical nuclear waste transport accident, the foam is expected to absorb a significant amount of impact energy by undergoing large inelastic volume reductions. Consequently, the crushing of polyurethane foams must be well characterized and accurately modeled to properly analyze a transport container accident. At the request of Sandia National Laboratories, a series of uniaxial, hydrostatic and triaxial compression tests on polyurethane foams were performed by the New Mexico Engineering Research Institute (NMERI). The combination of hydrostatic and triaxial tests was chosen to provide sufficient data to characterize both the volumetric and deviatoric behaviors of the foams and the coupling between the two responses. Typical results from the NMERI tests are included in this paper. A complete description of these tests can be found in Neilsen et al., 1987.