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Why is Mechanical Fatigue Different from Toughness in Elastomers? The Role of Damage by Polymer Chain Scission
- Source :
- Science Advances
- Publication Year :
- 2021
- Publisher :
- HAL CCSD, 2021.
-
Abstract
- Description<br />Tough elastomers that resist fracture at high loads are not optimum for sustaining many cycles at low loads.<br />Although elastomers often experience 10 to 100 million cycles before failure, there is now a limited understanding of their resistance to fatigue crack propagation. We tagged soft and tough double-network elastomers with mechanofluorescent probes and quantified damage by sacrificial bond scission after crack propagation under cyclic and monotonic loading. Damage along fracture surfaces and its spatial localization depend on the elastomer design, as well as on the applied load (i.e., cyclic or monotonic). The key result is that reversible elasticity and strain hardening at low and intermediate strains dictates fatigue resistance, whereas energy dissipation at high strains controls toughness. This information serves to engineer fatigue-resistant elastomers, understand fracture mechanisms, and reduce the environmental footprint of the polymer industry.
- Subjects :
- chemistry.chemical_classification
Toughness
Multidisciplinary
Materials Science
SciAdv r-articles
Fracture mechanics
02 engineering and technology
Polymer
Strain hardening exponent
010402 general chemistry
021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology
Elastomer
01 natural sciences
0104 chemical sciences
Fracture toughness
Applied Sciences and Engineering
chemistry
Fracture (geology)
[CHIM]Chemical Sciences
Physical and Materials Sciences
Composite material
Elasticity (economics)
0210 nano-technology
Research Article
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Science Advances
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....40e1ae2ed916936b3456f67d8ff000d0