AbstractAn experimental study is described of the tensile modulusEof elasticity, tear strengthGc, and strengthGaof adhesion to a Mylar substrate, for PVC gels prepared with a wide range of PVC concentrations and with four different plasticizers. The modulusE, measured under quasiequilibrium conditions, was found to be approximately proportional toc3, wherecis the volume concentration of PVC. The tensile behavior suggests that the molecular strands comprising the undiluted elastic network are relatively short, only about 26 C atoms long.Gcunder threshold conditions was found to vary withc2.25and to be considerably larger than (about 10 X) the value expected for a molecular network of short PVC chains. This difference is attributed to yielding of crystallites before molecular rupture can take place. Adhesion of PVC gels to Mylar was relatively weak. Both the tear strength and strength of adhesion were strongly dependent upon rate of fracture propagation and temperature, in good accord with the WLF rate‐temperature equivalence for simple glass‐forming substances. Thus, the strength of PVC gels appears to be determined largely by the glass temperature of the composition, and not by the amount or type of plasticizer except insofar as they affect the glass temperat
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