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University of Massachusetts Amherst

Fracture

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Controlling Mechanical Properties Of Well-Defined Polymer Networks, Ipek Sacligil Apr 2023

Controlling Mechanical Properties Of Well-Defined Polymer Networks, Ipek Sacligil

Doctoral Dissertations

Polymer networks are one of the most versatile and highly studied material class that revolutionized many aspects of life. Connecting the final network properties to the molecular parameters of its building blocks remains a major research thrust. Recent advances in network synthesis techniques allowed for accurate predictions of elastic modulus in model networks. Tew Group has developed highly efficient, thiol-norbornene networks with controllable mechanical properties. Chapter 2 focuses on modifying the gel fracture energy predicted by Lake-Thomas theory by accounting for loop defects. This study allowed for a priori estimates of gel fracture energy by combining theory, experiments, and simulations. …


Theory And Improved Methods For Probing The Cavitation To Fracture Transition, Christopher Barney Dec 2020

Theory And Improved Methods For Probing The Cavitation To Fracture Transition, Christopher Barney

Doctoral Dissertations

A material is considered soft when its bulk modulus is significantly greater than its shear modulus. Rubbery polymers are a class of soft materials where resistance to extension is mainly entropic in nature. Polymeric soft solids differ from liquids due to the presence of a percolated network of strong bonds that resist deformation and flow on a given time scale. The incompressible nature, entropically driven elasticity, and molecular scale network structure of soft polymeric solids combine to impart unique mechanical behavior that often results in complex material responses to simple loading situations. An important example of this is cavitation in …


Extreme Indentation And Fracture Of Soft Polymer Gels, Shruti Rattan Oct 2018

Extreme Indentation And Fracture Of Soft Polymer Gels, Shruti Rattan

Doctoral Dissertations

The mechanical properties of conventional hard materials, such as metals and ceramics, have received widespread attention in the past several decades; however mechanical characterization, failure in particular, of soft materials, such as polymer gels, elastomers, and biological tissues and organs, has largely been ignored. While practical issues such as difficulty in handling, processing, and slippage offer complexities in characterization, the breakdown of the fundamental assumptions of linear elastic fracture mechanics due to large strains prior to failure, significant energy dissipation ahead of a crack tip and rate and time dependent effects makes understanding of failure in soft materials even more …


Engineering Polymers Through Impact Modification And Superheated Liquid Processing, Gregory Connor Evans Nov 2016

Engineering Polymers Through Impact Modification And Superheated Liquid Processing, Gregory Connor Evans

Doctoral Dissertations

A new approach to toughen anionically polymerized polyamide 6 (aPA6) was applied using reaction induced phase separation (RIPS). This method solved issues with particle dispersion, mixture viscosity, and additive concentration common with conventional rubber toughening thereby making it an ideal candidate for fiber reinforced aPA6 reaction injection molding (RIM). Octamethylcyclotetrasiloxane (D4) was used as a functional additive that undergoes RIPS during aPA6 polymerization and polymerizes to polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS). Controlled phase separation, modulus retention, and increased crystallinity were achieved at low additive concentrations. Optimal properties were achieved with 2 wt% D4. Fracture energy was measured at high …


Aspects Of Network Formation And Property Evolution In Glassy Polymer Networks, Andrew Thomas Detwiler Sep 2011

Aspects Of Network Formation And Property Evolution In Glassy Polymer Networks, Andrew Thomas Detwiler

Open Access Dissertations

Experimental and theoretical characterization techniques are developed to illuminate relationships between molecular architecture, processing strategies, and physical properties of several model epoxy-amine systems. Just beyond the gel point partially cured networks are internally antiplasticized by unreacted epoxy and amine which leads to enhanced local chain packing and strain localization during deformation processes. Additional curing causes the antiplasticization to be removed, resulting in lower modulus, density, yield stress, and less strain localization. Physical and mechanical probes of network formation are discussed with respect to several different partially cured model epoxy-amine chemistries. The non-linear fracture energy release rate and the molecular architecture …