1. Self-healed microcracks in polymer bonded explosives via thermoreversible covalent bond and hydrogen actions.
- Author
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Yu-bin Li, Xu Zhao, Ya-jun Luo, Zhi-jian Yang, Li-ping Pan, Cheng-cheng Zeng, Cong-mei Lin, and Xue Zheng
- Subjects
EXPLOSIVES ,MICROCRACKS ,COMPOSITE materials testing ,HEAT treatment ,HYDROGEN bonding - Abstract
Polymeric materials used for the polymer bonded explosive (PBX) or other energetic composite materials (ECMs) that simultaneously possess excellent mechanical properties and high self-healing ability, convenient healing, and facile fabrication are always a huge challenge. Herein, self-healing linear polyurethane elastomers (PTMEG2000-IPDI-DAPU, denoted as 2I-DAPU) with high healing efficiency and mechanical properties were facilely fabricated by constructing reversible covalent bonds and dynamic hard domains into polymer chains. Furthermore, a TATB-based PBX using as-prepared 2I-DAPU polymer as the binder was constructed, disclosing an excellent self-healing property to heal cracks generated during fabrication, transportation and storage. The damage healing manner of such a PBX sample was investigated by means of prefabricated damage through mechanical load, heal treatment via heating at high temperature, and CT-scanning the inner structure and mechanical property characterization via Brazilian test. The self-healing mechanism of internal damage in PBX was preliminarily explored. We propose that this 2I-DAPU binder with Diels-Alder bonds could generate plentiful active surface groups resulting from damage and drive self-healing at fitting temperature and increase the slightly packed hard phase via incorporating a small amount of hydrogen bonds. This work may offer a novel strategy for improving mechanical property and healing ability in the field of self-healing material which could help expand its applications with enhanced versatility in mechanical-enhanced functional materials. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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