Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings

The long-term mechanical behaviour of a number of fluorocarbon and gut harp strings has been examined, and the results compared with a previous study of rectified nylon strings. The stretching behaviour of the three materials was studied via different measures of the Young’s modulus; with...

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Main Authors: Nicolas Lynch-Aird, Jim Woodhouse
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-11-01
Series:Materials
Subjects:
gut
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/11/11/2160
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spelling doaj-7b0916714e8748da8b2ab32c309945fc2020-11-24T21:41:37ZengMDPI AGMaterials1996-19442018-11-011111216010.3390/ma11112160ma11112160Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp StringsNicolas Lynch-Aird0Jim Woodhouse1The Old Forge, Burnt House Lane, Battisford, Suffolk IP14 2ND, UKEngineering Department, Cambridge University, Trumpington St, Cambridge CB2 1PZ, UKThe long-term mechanical behaviour of a number of fluorocarbon and gut harp strings has been examined, and the results compared with a previous study of rectified nylon strings. The stretching behaviour of the three materials was studied via different measures of the Young’s modulus; with test time scales on the order of weeks, minutes, and milliseconds. The strings were subjected to cyclic variations in temperature, enabling various aspects of their thermal behaviour to be investigated. The effects of humidity changes on gut strings were also examined. The behaviour of the fluorocarbon strings was found to be similar in many ways to that of the nylon strings, despite their different chemical formulation and significantly higher density. In particular, the faster measures of Young’s modulus were found to show an almost identical strong variation with the applied stress; while the thermal behaviour of both materials was largely determined by the balance between opposing effects associated with thermal contraction and thermal variations in the Young’s modulus. The gut strings showed some similarities of behaviour to the synthetic materials, but also major differences. All three measures of the Young’s modulus remained constant as the applied stress was increased. The gut strings were far more sensitive to changes in humidity than the synthetic materials, although some of the results, especially the thermal tuning sensitivity of the strings when held at constant length, displayed remarkable stability under changing humidity. The observed behaviour suggests very strongly that there is significant coupling between humidity-related changes in the linear density of a gut string and complementary changes in its tension.https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/11/11/2160polymernylonfluorocarbongutstringtuningharp
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nicolas Lynch-Aird
Jim Woodhouse
spellingShingle Nicolas Lynch-Aird
Jim Woodhouse
Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
Materials
polymer
nylon
fluorocarbon
gut
string
tuning
harp
author_facet Nicolas Lynch-Aird
Jim Woodhouse
author_sort Nicolas Lynch-Aird
title Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
title_short Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
title_full Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
title_fullStr Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
title_full_unstemmed Comparison of Mechanical Properties of Natural Gut and Synthetic Polymer Harp Strings
title_sort comparison of mechanical properties of natural gut and synthetic polymer harp strings
publisher MDPI AG
series Materials
issn 1996-1944
publishDate 2018-11-01
description The long-term mechanical behaviour of a number of fluorocarbon and gut harp strings has been examined, and the results compared with a previous study of rectified nylon strings. The stretching behaviour of the three materials was studied via different measures of the Young’s modulus; with test time scales on the order of weeks, minutes, and milliseconds. The strings were subjected to cyclic variations in temperature, enabling various aspects of their thermal behaviour to be investigated. The effects of humidity changes on gut strings were also examined. The behaviour of the fluorocarbon strings was found to be similar in many ways to that of the nylon strings, despite their different chemical formulation and significantly higher density. In particular, the faster measures of Young’s modulus were found to show an almost identical strong variation with the applied stress; while the thermal behaviour of both materials was largely determined by the balance between opposing effects associated with thermal contraction and thermal variations in the Young’s modulus. The gut strings showed some similarities of behaviour to the synthetic materials, but also major differences. All three measures of the Young’s modulus remained constant as the applied stress was increased. The gut strings were far more sensitive to changes in humidity than the synthetic materials, although some of the results, especially the thermal tuning sensitivity of the strings when held at constant length, displayed remarkable stability under changing humidity. The observed behaviour suggests very strongly that there is significant coupling between humidity-related changes in the linear density of a gut string and complementary changes in its tension.
topic polymer
nylon
fluorocarbon
gut
string
tuning
harp
url https://www.mdpi.com/1996-1944/11/11/2160
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AT jimwoodhouse comparisonofmechanicalpropertiesofnaturalgutandsyntheticpolymerharpstrings
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