ASTM E1877-00(2005) - 1.3.2005
 
Significance and Use

Thermogravimetry provides a rapid method for the determination of the temperature-decomposition profile of a material.

This practice is useful for quality control, specification acceptance and research.

This practice shall not be used for product lifetime predications unless a correlation between test results and actual lifetime has been demonstrated. In many cases, multiple mechanisms occur during the decomposition of a material, with one mechanism dominating over one temperature range, and a different mechanism dominating in a different temperature range. Users of this practice are cautioned to demonstrate for their system that any temperature extrapolations are technically sound.

 
1. Scope

1.1 This practice covers additional treatment of the Arrhenius activation energy data determined by Test Method E 1641 to develop a thermal endurance curve and derive a relative thermal index for materials.

1.2 This practice is generally applicable to materials with a well-defined decomposition profile, namely a smooth, continuous mass change with a single maximum rate.

1.3 There is no ISO standard equivalent to this practice.

This standard does not purport to address all of the safety concerns, if any, associated with its use. It is the responsibility of the user of this standard to establish appropriate safety and health practices and determine the applicability of regulatory limitations prior to use.

 
2. Referenced Documents

E2550-21

Standard Test Method for Thermal Stability by Thermogravimetry

E2958-21

Standard Test Methods for Kinetic Parameters by Factor Jump/Modulated Thermogravimetry

E1641-23

Standard Test Method for Decomposition Kinetics by Thermogravimetry Using the Ozawa/Flynn/Wall Method