77 research outputs found
Closed-form solutions for bonded elasticallycompressible layers
Compression of elastic layers between parallel plates often finds applications in the mechanical characterization of soft materials or the transfer-printing of nanomembranes with rubber stamps. In addition, annular rubbery gaskets and sealers are often under uniaxial compression during service. Analysis of elastic layers under compression has been focused on incompressible materials, and empirical assumptions of displacements were adopted for simplicity. For compressible materials, solutions obtained by the method of averaged equilibrium are sufficient for effective compression modulus but inaccurate for the displacement or stress fields, whereas solutions obtained by the method of series expansion are considerably complicated. In this article, we report full field, closed-form solutions for bonded elastic layers (disks, annuli, annuli with rigid shafts, infinitely long strips) in compression using separation of variables without any preassumed deformation profile. Our solutions can satisfy the exact forms of the equilibrium equations and all the essential boundary conditions as well as the weak form of the natural boundary conditions. Therefore, the predicted stress, displacement, and effective modulus have found excellent agreement with finite element modeling (FEM) results over a wide range of Poissonâs ratio and aspect ratio. Our analytical and FEM solutions of the stress, displacement, and effective modulus are highly sensitive to Poissonâs ratio, especially near 0.5. Therefore, we also propose a viable means to simultaneously measure the intrinsic Youngâs modulus and Poissonâs ratio of elastically compressible layers without camera settings. When Poissonâs ratio approaches 0.5, our solutions can degenerate to classical solutions for incompressible elastic layers
Extraction of rate-dependent tractionâseparation relations
Methods for characterizing and predicting crack growth in linearly or nonlinearly elastic materials are well established both theoretically and experimentally. However, fundamental work relating to fracture in polymers and other time dependent materials is relatively limited. Complexity in characterizing crack development, growth, and propagation in viscoelastic media stems from two different yet unique challenges. Firstly, typical energy-based methods, widely used in characterizing traction separation relationships in elastic media, are not applicable anymore because of inherent bulk energy dissipation, a characteristic of viscoelastic media. Furthermore, the load dependent response of viscoelastic materials makes it difficult to quantify any independent parameters which would be indicative of fracture process. For example, loss of stiffness at particular load level in an elastic body can be very well attributed to crack development/propagation, whereas the same cannot be hypothesized for a viscoelastic material. The primary objective of this study is to establish a theoretical framework for developing a simple experimental procedure aimed at quantifying tractionâseparation relations, a vital fracture parameter used in numerical modeling of cohesive or interfacial cracks in viscoelastic media. The procedure combines the pseudo strain concepts of Schapery with the field projection method of Kim to extract tractionâseparation relationships for both cohesive and adhesive cracks, without making any assumptions on their form. It was found that test problems for the interaction integrals could be chosen so as to greatly reduce the number of measurements that are required. Numerical experiments were carried out on two strips of polyvinyl acetate bonded together and conclusive results produced demonstrate the efficiency of the framework developed in this study
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Failure by Simultaneous Grain Growth, Strain Localization, and Interface Debonding in Metal Films on Polymer Substrates
In a previous paper, we have demonstrated that a microcrystalline copper film well bonded to a polymer substrate can be stretched beyond 50% without cracking. The film eventually fails through the co-evolution of necking and debonding from the substrate. Here we report much lower strains to failure (around 10%) for polymer-supported nanocrystalline metal films, whose microstructure is revealed to be unstable under mechanical loading. We find that strain localization and deformation-associated grain growth facilitate each other, resulting in an unstable deformation process. Film/substrate delamination can be found wherever strain localization occurs. We therefore propose that three concomitant mechanisms are responsible for the failure of a plastically deformable but microstructurally unstable thin metal film: strain localization at large grains, deformation-induced grain growth and film debonding from the substrate.Engineering and Applied Science
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Islands stretch test for measuring the interfacial fracture energy between a hard film and a soft substrate
We present a technique for measuring the interfacial fracture energy, , between a hard thin film and a soft substrate. A periodic array of hard thin islands is fabricated on a soft substrate, which is then subjected to uniaxial tension under an optical microscope. When the applied strain reaches a critical value, delamination between the islands and the substrate starts from the edge of the islands. As the strain is increased, the interfacial cracks grow in a stable fashion. At a given applied strain, the width of the delaminated region is a unique function of the interfacial fracture energy. We have calculated the energy release rate driving the delamination as a function of delamination width, island size, island thickness, and applied strain. For a given materials system, this relationship allows determination of the interfacial fracture energy from a measurement of the delamination width. The technique is demonstrated by measuring the interfacial fracture energy of plasma-enhanced chemical vapor deposition SiNx islands on a polyimide substrate. We anticipate that this technique will find application in the flexible electronics industry where hard islands on soft substrates are a common architecture to protect active devices from fracture.Engineering and Applied Science
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Inorganic Islands on a Highly Stretchable Polyimide Substrate
For a flexible electronic device integrating inorganic materials on a polymer substrate, the polymer can deform substantially, but the inorganic materials usually fracture at small strains. This paper describes an approach to make such a device highly stretchable. A
polyimide substrate is first coated with a thin layer of an elastomer, on top of which SiNx islands are fabricated. When the substrate is stretched to a large strain, the SiNx islands remain intact. Calculations confirm that the elastomer reduces the strain in the SiNx islands by orders of magnitude.Engineering and Applied Science
Observation of unconventional van der Waals multiferroics near room temperature
The search for two-dimensional (2D) van der Waals (vdW) multiferroics is an
exciting yet challenging endeavor. Room-temperature 2D vdW few-layer
multiferroic is a much bigger insurmountable obstacle. Here we report the
discovery of an unconventional 2D vdW multiferroic with out-of-plane
ferroelectric polarization and long-range magnetic orders in trilayer NiI2
device from 10 K to 295 K. The evolutions of magnetic domains with magnetic
field, and the evolutions between ferroelectric and antiferroelectric phase
have been unambiguously observed. More significantly, we realize a robust
mutual control of magnetism and ferroelectricity at room temperature. The
magnetic domains are manipulated by a small voltage ranging from 1 V to 6 V at
0 T and 295 K. This work opens opportunities for exploring multiferroic physics
at the limit of few atomic layers.Comment: 4 figure
Large scale and integrated platform for digital mass culture of anchorage dependent cells
Industrial applications of anchorage-dependent cells require large-scale cell culture with multifunctional monitoring of culture conditions and control of cell behaviour. Here, we introduce a large-scale, integrated, and smart cell-culture platform (LISCCP) that facilitates digital mass culture of anchorage-dependent cells. LISCCP is devised through large-scale integration of ultrathin sensors and stimulator arrays in multiple layers. LISCCP provides real-time, 3D, and multimodal monitoring and localized control of the cultured cells, which thereby allows minimizing operation labour and maximizing cell culture performance. Wireless integration of multiple LISCCPs across multiple incubators further amplifies the culture scale and enables digital monitoring and local control of numerous culture layers, making the large-scale culture more efficient. Thus, LISCCP can transform conventional labour-intensive and high-cost cell cultures into efficient digital mass cell cultures. This platform could be useful for industrial applications of cell cultures such as in vitro toxicity testing of drugs and cosmetics and clinical scale production of cells for cell therapy.
A Review on Mechanics and Mechanical Properties of 2D Materials - Graphene and Beyond
Since the first successful synthesis of graphene just over a decade ago, a
variety of two-dimensional (2D) materials (e.g., transition
metal-dichalcogenides, hexagonal boron-nitride, etc.) have been discovered.
Among the many unique and attractive properties of 2D materials, mechanical
properties play important roles in manufacturing, integration and performance
for their potential applications. Mechanics is indispensable in the study of
mechanical properties, both experimentally and theoretically. The coupling
between the mechanical and other physical properties (thermal, electronic,
optical) is also of great interest in exploring novel applications, where
mechanics has to be combined with condensed matter physics to establish a
scalable theoretical framework. Moreover, mechanical interactions between 2D
materials and various substrate materials are essential for integrated device
applications of 2D materials, for which the mechanics of interfaces (adhesion
and friction) has to be developed for the 2D materials. Here we review recent
theoretical and experimental works related to mechanics and mechanical
properties of 2D materials. While graphene is the most studied 2D material to
date, we expect continual growth of interest in the mechanics of other 2D
materials beyond graphene
Inorganic islands on a highly stretchable polyimide substrate
Abstract For a flexible electronic device integrating inorganic materials on a polymer substrate, the polymer can deform substantially, but the inorganic materials usually fracture at small strains. This paper describes an approach to make such a device highly stretchable. A polyimide substrate is first coated with a thin layer of an elastomer, on top of which SiN x islands are fabricated. When the substrate is stretched to a large strain, the SiN x islands remain intact. Calculations confirm that the elastomer reduces the strain in the SiN x islands by orders of magnitude
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