4.5 Article

How Nanofibers Carry the Load: Toward a Universal and Reliable Approach for Tensile Testing of Polymeric Nanofibrous Membranes

Journal

MACROMOLECULAR MATERIALS AND ENGINEERING
Volume 306, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/mame.202100183

Keywords

electrospinning; grammage; mass-based normalization of loads; mechanical properties; nanofibers; stress-strain; thickness

Funding

  1. Regione Emilia Romagna [TEAM SAVE-E91B18000460007, PG/2018/632196]
  2. DGR [986/2018]

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The study presents a detailed and critical investigation on the tensile testing of nanofibrous nonwovens, using electrospun Nylon 66 random nanofibrous mats as a case study. It is found that the diameter of nanofibers within a certain range affects the mechanical behavior of the mat, while specimen geometry does not impact the results.
Nanofibrous nonwovens show high versatility and outstanding properties, with reduced weight. Porous morphology, high material flexibility and deformability challenge their mechanical testing, severely affecting results reliability. Still today, a specific technical standard method to carry out tensile testing of nonwoven nanofibrous mats is lacking, as well as studies concerning tensile test data reliability. In this work, an accurate, systematic, and critical study is presented concerning tensile testing of nonwovens, using electrospun Nylon 66 random nanofibrous mats as a case study. Nanofibers diameter and specimen geometry are investigated to thoroughly describe the nanomat tensile behavior, also considering the polymer thermal properties, and the nanofibers crossings number as a function of the nanofibers diameter. Below a threshold value, which lies between 150 and 250 nm, the overall mat mechanical behavior changes from ductile to brittle, showing enhanced elastic modulus for a high number of nanofibers crossings. While specimen geometry does not affect tensile results. Stress-strain data are analyzed using a phenomenological data fitting model to better interpret the tensile behavior. The experimental results demonstrate the high reliability of the proposed mass-based load normalization, providing a simple, effective, and universally suitable method for obtaining high reproducible tensile stress-strain curves.

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