
doi: 10.1007/bf00752190
Shear bands produced in polystyrene by compression can be reverse sheared by a second compression in a perpendicular direction. The net shear strain can be zero or negative. Like the forward shear, the reverse shear also produces a ridge on the surface. The height of the ridge seems to be proportional to the reverse shear strain. On the side surface the reverse shear produces a step whose height increases at an average rate of 1.17 mm sec−1 (at a crosshead speed of 1 mm sec−1), estimated by high-speed cinematography at 1000 frames sec−1. During the reverse shear the second compression experiences a yield drop whose size increases with the forward strain due to the first compression. The implications of these results are discussed.
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