4.6 Article

Temperature effects on the nanoindentation characterization of stiffness gradients in confined polymers

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 15, Issue 3, Pages 359-370

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c8sm01539b

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) through the Center for Hierarchical Materials Design (CHiMaD)
  2. Quest HPC Systems at Northwestern University
  3. International Institute for Nanotechnology at Northwestern University
  4. Fulbright Program grant - Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs of the United States Department of State
  5. Goodyear Rubber and Tire Company [4510883960, 12 -3/31/15]
  6. ND EPSCoR
  7. NISTCHiMaD Fellowship

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The stiffening of polymers near inorganic fillers plays an important role in strengthening polymer nanocomposites, and recent advances in metrology have allowed us to sample such effects using local mechanical measurement techniques such as nanoindentation and atomic force microscopy. A general understanding of temperature and confinement effects on the measured stiffness gradient length-scale xi(int) is lacking however, which convolutes molecular interpretation of local property measurements. Using coarse-grained molecular dynamics and finite element nanoindentation simulations, we show that the measured xint increases with temperature in highly confined polymer systems, a dependence which acts in the opposite direction in systems with low confinement. These disparate trends are closely related to the polymer's viscoelastic state and the resulting changes in incompressibility and dissipative ability as the polymer transitions from glassy to rubbery. At high temperatures above the glass transition temperature, a geometrically confined system restricts the viscous dissipation of the applied load by the increasingly incompressible polymer. The indentation causes a dramatic build-up of hydrostatic pressure near the confining surface, which contributes to an enlarged measurement of xint. By contrast, a less-confined system allows the pressure to dissipate via intermolecular motion, thus lowering the measured xint with increased temperature above the glass transition temperature. These findings suggest that the well-established thin film-nancomposite analogy for polymer mobility near interfaces can be convoluted when measuring local mechanical properties, as the viscoelastic state and geometric confinement of the polymer can affect the nanomechanical response during indentation purely from continuum effects.

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