Advanced Science (Aug 2024)

Toughening Self‐Healing Elastomers with Chain Mobility

  • Matthew Wei Ming Tan,
  • Patrick Michael Thornton,
  • Gurunathan Thangavel,
  • Hyunwoo Bark,
  • Reinhold Dauskardt,
  • Pooi See Lee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202308154
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 30
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Enhancing fracture toughness and self‐healing within soft elastomers is crucial to prolonging the operational lifetimes of soft devices. Herein, it is revealed that tuning the polymer chain mobilities of carboxylated‐functionalized polyurethane through incorporating plasticizers or thermal treatment can enhance these properties. Self‐healing is promoted as polymer chains gain greater mobility toward the broken interface to reassociate their bonds. Raising the temperature from 80 to 120 °C, the recovered work of fracture is increased from 2.86 to 123.7 MJ m−3. Improved fracture toughness is realized through two effects. First, strong carboxyl hydrogen bonds dissipate large energies when broken. Second, chain mobilities enable the redistribution of localized stress concentrations to allow crack blunting, enlarging the size of dissipation zones. At optimal conditions of plasticizers (3 wt.%) or temperature (40 °C) to promote chain mobilities, fracture toughness improves from 16.3 to 19.9 and 25.6 kJ m−2, respectively. Insights of fracture properties at healed soft interfaces are revealed through double cantilever beam tests. These measurements indicate that fracture mechanics play a critical role in delaying complete failure at partial self‐healing. By imparting optimal polymer chain mobilities within tough and self‐healing elastomers, effective prevention against damage and better recovery are realized.

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