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Interfacial self-healing of nanocomposite hydrogels: Theory and experiment.

Authors :
Wang, Qiming
Gao, Zheming
Yu, Kunhao
Source :
Journal of the Mechanics & Physics of Solids. Dec2017, Vol. 109, p288-306. 19p.
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Polymers with dynamic bonds are able to self-heal their fractured interfaces and restore the mechanical strengths. It is largely elusive how to analytically model this self-healing behavior to construct the mechanistic relationship between the self-healing properties (e.g., healed interfacial strength and equilibrium healing time) and the material compositions and healing conditions. Here, we take a self-healable nanocomposite hydrogel as an example to illustrate an interfacial self-healing theory for hydrogels with dynamic bonds. In the theory, we consider the free polymer chains diffuse across the interface and reform crosslinks to bridge the interface. We analytically reveal that the healed strengths of nanocomposite hydrogels increase with the healing time in an error-function-like form. The equilibrium self-healing time of the full-strength recovery decreases with the temperature and increases with the nanoparticle concentration. We further analytically reveal that the healed interfacial strength decreases with increasing delaying time before the healing process. The theoretical results quantitatively match with our experiments on nanosilica hydrogels, and also agree well with other researchers’ experiments on nanoclay hydrogels. We expect that this theory would open promising avenues for quantitative understanding of the self-healing mechanics of various polymers with dynamic bonds, and offer insights for designing high-performance self-healing polymers. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00225096
Volume :
109
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of the Mechanics & Physics of Solids
Publication Type :
Periodical
Accession number :
125287744
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2017.08.004