A post mortem analysis of the strain-induced crystallization effects on fatigue of elastomers
Pith reviewed 2026-05-25 02:08 UTC · model grok-4.3
The pith
Fatigue striations form in natural rubber at all loading ratios tested, showing they are not the signature of strain-induced crystallization reinforcement.
A machine-rendered reading of the paper's core claim, the machinery that carries it, and where it could break.
Core claim
Post-mortem examination of Diabolo samples reveals that fatigue striations require crystallinity, as none form at 90°C, yet they appear for every loading ratio applied at 23°C. This demonstrates that striations are not the signature of the reinforcement. Two regimes are distinguished at room temperature: small patches of differing orientations (Regime 1) and zones of large, well-formed striations (Regime 2). Increasing the minimum strain value amplifies the striation phenomenon and favors Regime 2.
What carries the argument
Post-mortem analysis of fatigue striations on fracture surfaces, with identification of Regime 1 (small patches) and Regime 2 (large striations) and their dependence on temperature and minimum strain.
If this is right
- Striations require a sufficient crystallinity level, as evidenced by their total absence at 90°C.
- Striations appear for all loading ratios from -0.25 to 0.25, so they do not mark the reinforcement effect.
- Higher minimum strains increase striation density and promote the large-striation Regime 2.
Where Pith is reading between the lines
- The striation patterns may reflect local crack-tip crystal alignment rather than the global lifetime benefit of SIC.
- Mapping striation appearance versus temperature could locate the crystallinity threshold more precisely than the 23 °C versus 90 °C comparison alone.
- Regime 2 might correspond to faster or more stable crack advance once a critical crystal density is reached.
Load-bearing premise
That the absence of striations at 90°C results solely from the loss of crystallinity rather than other temperature-driven changes in material behavior or surface visibility.
What would settle it
Detection of striations on samples tested at 90°C under conditions where crystallinity remains suppressed, or direct measurement showing no striations when crystallinity is eliminated by means other than temperature.
read the original abstract
Natural rubber (NR) is the most commonly used elastomer in the automotive industry thanks to its outstanding fatigue resistance. Strain-induced crystallization (SIC) is found to play a role of paramount importance in the great crack growth resistance of NR [1]. Typically, NR exhibits a lifetime reinforcement for non-relaxing loadings [2-3]. At the microscopic scale, fatigue striations were observed on the fracture surface of Diabolo samples tested in fatigue. They are the signature of SIC [2,4,5]. In order to provide additional information on the role of SIC in the fatigue crack growth resistance of NR, striations are investigated through post-mortem analysis after fatigue experiments using loading ranging from-0.25 to 0.25. No striation was observed in the case of tests performed at 90{\textdegree}C. This confirms that the formation of striation requires a certain crystallinity level in the material. At 23{\textdegree}C, two striation regimes were identified: small striation patches with different orientations (Regime 1) and zones with large and well-formed striations (Regime 2). Since fatigue striations are observed for all the loading ratios applied, they are therefore not the signature of the reinforcement. Nevertheless, increasing the minimum value of the strain amplified the striation phenomenon and the occurrence of Regime 2.
Editorial analysis
A structured set of objections, weighed in public.
Referee Report
Summary. The manuscript reports post-mortem SEM analysis of fracture surfaces from natural rubber fatigue tests on Diabolo samples under loading ratios R from -0.25 to 0.25. At 23°C, striations appear across all ratios in two regimes (small oriented patches in Regime 1; large well-formed zones in Regime 2), with higher minimum strain increasing their prevalence and Regime 2 occurrence. No striations appear at 90°C, which the authors interpret as confirming that striation formation requires a minimum crystallinity level. The central conclusion is that striations are not the signature of non-relaxing loading reinforcement, although they are modulated by minimum strain.
Significance. If the attribution of striations exclusively to SIC is validated, the observations would help separate the general role of crystallinity in crack resistance from its specific contribution to R-ratio-dependent lifetime reinforcement in NR. The study is a direct experimental comparison with internally consistent observations under stated conditions and no free parameters or circular derivations.
major comments (2)
- [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph linking 90°C results to crystallinity): the claim that absence of striations at 90°C 'confirms that the formation of striation requires a certain crystallinity level' treats temperature as affecting only SIC. No auxiliary data (WAXD, DSC, or equivalent) quantify crystallinity at 90°C, and the design does not control for temperature-dependent changes in viscoelastic dissipation, intrinsic crack growth rate, or surface morphology independent of crystals.
- [Abstract] Abstract (sentence on loading ratios and reinforcement): the inference that striations 'are therefore not the signature of the reinforcement' because they appear for all R values rests on the premise that striations mark SIC exclusively. Without quantitative metrics (e.g., striation spacing, density, or area fraction versus R) or a direct comparison of crack growth rates, the distinction between general SIC effects and non-relaxing reinforcement remains qualitative.
minor comments (2)
- [Abstract] The term 'Diabolo samples' is used without definition or reference to the specimen geometry; a brief description or citation would aid readers.
- [Abstract] The LaTeX fragment '90{°}C' should be rendered as 90°C in the published version.
Simulated Author's Rebuttal
We thank the referee for the careful review and constructive feedback. We address each major comment below. Revisions to the abstract have been made to moderate the strength of the claims while preserving the core observations from the post-mortem SEM analysis.
read point-by-point responses
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (paragraph linking 90°C results to crystallinity): the claim that absence of striations at 90°C 'confirms that the formation of striation requires a certain crystallinity level' treats temperature as affecting only SIC. No auxiliary data (WAXD, DSC, or equivalent) quantify crystallinity at 90°C, and the design does not control for temperature-dependent changes in viscoelastic dissipation, intrinsic crack growth rate, or surface morphology independent of crystals.
Authors: We agree that the original phrasing 'confirms' overstates the case, since temperature affects viscoelasticity, crack growth kinetics, and morphology in addition to SIC. The study is limited to post-mortem SEM and does not include in-situ WAXD, DSC, or other crystallinity measurements at 90°C. We will revise the abstract to read that the absence of striations at 90°C 'is consistent with striation formation requiring a minimum crystallinity level', while noting that other temperature-dependent factors cannot be ruled out. This change avoids overclaiming based on the available data. revision: yes
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Referee: [Abstract] Abstract (sentence on loading ratios and reinforcement): the inference that striations 'are therefore not the signature of the reinforcement' because they appear for all R values rests on the premise that striations mark SIC exclusively. Without quantitative metrics (e.g., striation spacing, density, or area fraction versus R) or a direct comparison of crack growth rates, the distinction between general SIC effects and non-relaxing reinforcement remains qualitative.
Authors: The key observation is that striations occur for every tested R ratio (-0.25 to 0.25), including fully relaxing conditions, whereas the well-known lifetime reinforcement in NR is specific to non-relaxing (R > 0) loading. This supports the conclusion that striations are not the direct signature of that R-ratio reinforcement, even though minimum strain modulates their prevalence and the appearance of Regime 2. We acknowledge the argument is qualitative in the absence of striation-density metrics or crack-growth-rate comparisons. The abstract will be revised to state that the observations 'indicate striations are not the direct signature' rather than 'are therefore not the signature', making the qualitative nature explicit. revision: partial
Circularity Check
No circularity: purely observational experimental study
full rationale
The paper reports direct post-mortem SEM observations of fracture surfaces from fatigue tests on natural rubber samples across loading ratios and temperatures. Conclusions (striations observed at 23°C for all R-ratios but absent at 90°C; two regimes identified) follow from comparative imaging without any equations, fitted parameters, derivations, or self-referential steps. Citations to prior work on SIC and striations are external and not used to close a logical loop within this manuscript. No load-bearing claim reduces to a fit, definition, or self-citation chain by construction.
Axiom & Free-Parameter Ledger
axioms (2)
- domain assumption Striations on fracture surfaces are the signature of strain-induced crystallization in natural rubber
- domain assumption Absence of striations at 90°C is due to insufficient crystallinity level
Reference graph
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discussion (0)
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