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Strong and ductile platelet-reinforced polymer films inspired by nature: Microstructure and mechanical properties

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2011

Lorenz J. Bonderer*
Affiliation:
Nonmetallic Materials, Department of Materials, ETH-Zürich, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland
André R. Studart
Affiliation:
Complex Materials, Department of Materials, ETH-Zürich, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland
Eckhard Pippel
Affiliation:
Max Planck Institut für Mikrostrukturphysik, D-06120 Halle, Germany
Ludwig J. Gauckler*
Affiliation:
Nonmetallic Materials, Department of Materials, ETH-Zürich, CH-8093 Zürich, Switzerland
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Abstract

The unique structure and mechanical properties of platelet-reinforced biological materials such as bone and seashells have motivated the development of artificial composites exhibiting new, unusual mechanical behavior. On the basis of designing principles found in these biological structures, we combined high-performance artificial building blocks to fabricate platelet-reinforced polymer matrix composites that exhibit simultaneously high tensile strength and ductility. The mechanical properties are correlated with the underlying microstructure of the composites before and after mechanical loading using transmission electron microscopy. The critical role of the strength of the platelet–polymer interface and its dependence on the platelet surface chemistry and the type of matrix polymer are studied. Thin multilayered films with highly oriented platelets were produced through the bottom-up layer-by-layer assembly of submicrometer-thin alumina platelets and either polyimide or chitosan as polymer matrix. The tensile strength and strain at rupture of the prepared composites exceeded that of nacre, whereas the elastic modulus reached values similar to that of lamellar bones. In contrast to the brittle failure of clay-reinforced composites of similar or higher strength and stiffness, our composites exhibit plastic deformation in the range of 2–90% before failure. In addition to the high reinforcing efficiency and ductility achieved, several toughening mechanisms were identified in fractured composites, namely friction, debonding, and formation of microcracks at the platelet–polymer interface, as well as plastic deformation and void formation within the continuous polymeric phase. The combination of high strength, ductility, and toughness was achieved by selecting platelets that exhibit an aspect ratio high enough to carry significant load but small enough to allow for fracture under the platelet pull-out mode. At high concentrations of platelets, the ductility gets lost because of out-of-plane misalignment of the platelets and incorporation of voids in the microstructure during processing. The designing principles applied in this study can potentially be extended to other types of platelets and polymers to obtain new, hybrid materials with tunable mechanical properties.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Materials Research Society 2009

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