252 research outputs found
Harnessing entropy to enhance toughness in reversibly crosslinked polymer networks
Reversible crosslinking is a design paradigm for polymeric materials, wherein
they are microscopically reinforced with chemical species that form transient
crosslinks between the polymer chains. Besides the potential for self-healing,
recent experimental work suggests that freely diffusing reversible crosslinks
in polymer networks, such as gels, can enhance the toughness of the material
without substantial change in elasticity. This presents the opportunity for
making highly elastic materials that can be strained to a large extent before
rupturing. Here, we employ Gaussian chain theory, molecular simulation, and
polymer self-consistent field theory for networks to construct an equilibrium
picture for how reversible crosslinks can toughen a polymer network without
affecting its linear elasticity. Maximisation of polymer entropy drives the
reversible crosslinks to bind preferentially near the permanent crosslinks in
the network, leading to local molecular reinforcement without significant
alteration of the network topology. In equilibrium conditions, permanent
crosslinks share effectively the load with neighbouring reversible crosslinks,
forming multi-functional crosslink points. The network is thereby globally
toughened, while the linear elasticity is left largely unaltered. Practical
guidelines are proposed to optimise this design in experiment, along with a
discussion of key kinetic and timescale considerations
Adhesion and non-linear rheology of adhesives with supramolecular crosslinking points
Soft supramolecular materials are promising for the design of innovative and
highly tunable adhesives. These materials are composed of polymer chains
functionalized by strongly interacting moieties, sometimes called "stickers".
In order to systematically investigate the effect of the presence of
associative groups on the debonding properties of a supramolecular adhesive, a
series of supramolecular model systems has been characterized by probe-tack
tests. These model materials, composed of linear and low dispersity
poly(butylacrylate) chains functionalized in the middle by a single tri-urea
sticker, are able to self-associate by six hydrogen bonds and range in
molecular weight (M n) between 5 and 85 kg/mol. The linear rheology and the
nanostructure of the same materials (called "PnBA3U") was the object of a
previous study 1,2. At room temperature, the association of polymers via
hydrogen bonds induces the formation of rod-like aggregates structured into
bundles for M n \textless{} 40kg/mol and the behavior of a soft elastic
material was observed (G'\textgreater{}\textgreater{}G "and G'~ 0). For
higher M n , the filaments were randomly oriented and polymers displayed a
crossover towards viscous behavior although terminal relaxation was not reached
in the experimental frequency window. All these materials show however similar
adhesive properties characterized by a cohesive mode of failure and low
debonding energies (W adh \textless{}40J/m 2 for a debonding speed of
100m/s). The debonding mechanisms observed during the adhesion tests have
been investigated in detail with an Image tools analysis developed by our group
3. The measure of the projected area covered by cavities growing in the
adhesive layer during debonding can be used to estimate the true stress in the
walls of the cavities and thus, to characterize the in-situ large strain
deformation of the thin layer during the adhesion test itself. This analysis
revealed in particular that the PnBA3U materials with M n \textless{} 40 kg/mol
soften very markedly at large deformation like yield stress fluids, explaining
the low adhesion energies measured for these viscoelastic gels.
The Slowly Formed Guiselin Brush
We study polymer layers formed by irreversible adsorption from a polymer
melt. Our theory describes an experiment which is a ``slow'' version of that
proposed by Guiselin [Europhys. Lett., v. 17 (1992) p. 225] who considered
instantaneously irreversibly adsorbing chains and predicted a universal density
profile of the layer after swelling with solvent to produce the ``Guiselin
brush.'' Here we ask what happens when adsorption is not instantaneous. The
classic example is chemisorption. In this case the brush is formed slowly and
the final structure depends on the experiment's duration, . We find
the swollen layer consists of an inner region of thickness with approximately constant density and an outer region
extending up to height which has the same density decay as for the Guiselin case.Comment: 7 pages, submitted to Europhysics Letter
Interdigitation between surface-anchored polymer chains and an elastomer : consequences for adhesion promotion
We study the adhesion between a cross-linked elastomer and a flat solid
surface where polymer chains have been end-grafted. To understand the adhesive
feature of such a system, one has to study both the origin of the grafted layer
interdigitation with the network, and the end-grafted chains extraction out of
the elastomer when it comes unstuck from the solid surface. We shall tackle
here the first aspect for which we develop a partial interdigitation model that
lets us analytically predict a critical surface grafting density beyond which the layer no longer interdigitates
with the elastomer. We then relate this result with recent adhesion
measurements
Cavitation-induced force transition in confined viscous liquids under traction
We perform traction experiments on simple liquids highly confined between
parallel plates. At small separation rates, we observe a simple response
corresponding to a convergent Poiseuille flow. Dramatic changes in the force
response occur at high separation rates, with the appearance of a force plateau
followed by an abrupt drop. By direct observation in the course of the
experiment, we show that cavitation accounts for these features which are
reminiscent of the utmost complex behavior of adhesive films under traction.
Surprisingly enough, this is observed here in purely viscous fluids.Comment: Submitted to Physical Review Letters on May 31, 2002. Related
informations on http://www.crpp.u-bordeaux.fr/tack.htm
Molecular weight effects on chain pull-out fracture of reinforced polymeric interfaces
Using Brownian dynamics, we simulate the fracture of polymer interfaces
reinforced by diblock connector chains. We find that for short chains the
interface fracture toughness depends linearly on the degree of polymerization
of the connector chains, while for longer chains the dependence becomes
. Based on the geometry of initial chain configuration, we propose a
scaling argument that accounts for both short and long chain limits and
crossover between them.Comment: 5 pages, 3 figure
On the nature of surface roughness with application to contact mechanics, sealing, rubber friction and adhesion
Surface roughness has a huge impact on many important phenomena. The most
important property of rough surfaces is the surface roughness power spectrum
C(q). We present surface roughness power spectra of many surfaces of practical
importance, obtained from the surface height profile measured using optical
methods and the Atomic Force Microscope. We show how the power spectrum
determines the contact area between two solids. We also present applications to
sealing, rubber friction and adhesion for rough surfaces, where the power
spectrum enters as an important input.Comment: Topical review; 82 pages, 61 figures; Format: Latex (iopart). Some
figures are in Postscript Level
Tensile Fracture of Welded Polymer Interfaces: Miscibility, Entanglements and Crazing
Large-scale molecular simulations are performed to investigate tensile
failure of polymer interfaces as a function of welding time . Changes in the
tensile stress, mode of failure and interfacial fracture energy are
correlated to changes in the interfacial entanglements as determined from
Primitive Path Analysis. Bulk polymers fail through craze formation, followed
by craze breakdown through chain scission. At small welded interfaces are
not strong enough to support craze formation and fail at small strains through
chain pullout at the interface. Once chains have formed an average of about one
entanglement across the interface, a stable craze is formed throughout the
sample. The failure stress of the craze rises with welding time and the mode of
craze breakdown changes from chain pullout to chain scission as the interface
approaches bulk strength. The interfacial fracture energy is calculated
by coupling the simulation results to a continuum fracture mechanics model. As
in experiment, increases as before saturating at the average
bulk fracture energy . As in previous simulations of shear strength,
saturation coincides with the recovery of the bulk entanglement density. Before
saturation, is proportional to the areal density of interfacial
entanglements. Immiscibiltiy limits interdiffusion and thus suppresses
entanglements at the interface. Even small degrees of immisciblity reduce
interfacial entanglements enough that failure occurs by chain pullout and
- …