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Shape complexity and fractality of fracture surfaces of swelled isotactic polypropylene with supercritical carbon dioxide

Abstract

We have investigated the fractal characteristics and shape complexity of the fracture surfaces of swelled isotactic polypropylene Y1600 in supercritical carbon dioxide fluid through the consideration of the statistics of the islands in binary SEM images. The distributions of area AA, perimeter LL, and shape complexity CC follow power laws p(A)A(μA+1)p(A)\sim A^{-(\mu_A+1)}, p(L)L(μL+1)p(L)\sim L^{-(\mu_L+1)}, and p(C)C(ν+1)p(C)\sim C^{-(\nu+1)}, with the scaling ranges spanning over two decades. The perimeter and shape complexity scale respectively as LAD/2L\sim A^{D/2} and CAqC\sim A^q in two scaling regions delimited by A103A\approx 10^3. The fractal dimension and shape complexity increase when the temperature decreases. In addition, the relationships among different power-law scaling exponents μA\mu_A, μB\mu_B, ν\nu, DD, and qq have been derived analytically, assuming that AA, LL, and CC follow power-law distributions.Comment: RevTex, 6 pages including 7 eps figure

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    Last time updated on 02/01/2020