The safety level in advanced load bearing applications can be enhanced if the material would be able to detect the in-service deformation, allowing a real time evaluation of the reliability state of the components. Polymeric materials can be used to get such a functionality through the insertion of so-called mechanophore units, whose main property is to chemically respond to mechanical stimuli. In the present paper, a micromechanical approach is developed to model the response of polymers containing reporting units, whose activation is triggered by the deformation of the underneath network or by a chemical stimulus. The model, through an Arrhenius-like equilibrium reaction law, provides a quantitative evaluation of the fraction of stress-activated molecules. Moreover, if the mechanophore activation involves also a change in their geometrical conformation, it influences the network deformation and the corresponding mechanical effects must be also accounted for. The formulated micromechanical model is presented and implemented in a FE code in order to simulate structural elements made of a self-diagnostic material. In particular, we consider the fluorescence-based strain detection of pre-cracked elements made of polymers with supramolecular complexes cross-linked to the polymer’s chains; the fluorescence intensity is assumed to be proportional to the volume fraction of the activated units, thus enabling to quantify the associated material’s strain value.
Mechanical modelling of self-diagnostic polymers / Roberto Brighenti; Federico Artoni. - In: PROCEDIA STRUCTURAL INTEGRITY. - ISSN 2452-3216. - 13:(2018), pp. 819-824. [10.1016/j.prostr.2018.12.157]
Mechanical modelling of self-diagnostic polymers
Roberto Brighenti;
2018
Abstract
The safety level in advanced load bearing applications can be enhanced if the material would be able to detect the in-service deformation, allowing a real time evaluation of the reliability state of the components. Polymeric materials can be used to get such a functionality through the insertion of so-called mechanophore units, whose main property is to chemically respond to mechanical stimuli. In the present paper, a micromechanical approach is developed to model the response of polymers containing reporting units, whose activation is triggered by the deformation of the underneath network or by a chemical stimulus. The model, through an Arrhenius-like equilibrium reaction law, provides a quantitative evaluation of the fraction of stress-activated molecules. Moreover, if the mechanophore activation involves also a change in their geometrical conformation, it influences the network deformation and the corresponding mechanical effects must be also accounted for. The formulated micromechanical model is presented and implemented in a FE code in order to simulate structural elements made of a self-diagnostic material. In particular, we consider the fluorescence-based strain detection of pre-cracked elements made of polymers with supramolecular complexes cross-linked to the polymer’s chains; the fluorescence intensity is assumed to be proportional to the volume fraction of the activated units, thus enabling to quantify the associated material’s strain value.File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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