Abstract
Unfilled elastomers often suffer from poor fracture resistance at high temperature where viscoelastic dissipation is low. A molecular design based on multiple interpenetrating networks composed of a brittle filler network isotropically prestretched to a value λ0 by swelling it in an extensible matrix leads to a dramatic increase of fracture energy Γc, typically attributed to sacrificial bond scission creating a dissipative damage zone ahead of the propagating crack. However, the molecular mechanisms controlling the size of the damage zone when the crack propagates are currently unknown. Here, we combine fluorogenic mechanochemistry with quantitative confocal mapping and mechanical testing to characterize both Γc and the extent of bond scission in the sacrificial network detected on the fracture surfaces for different stretch rates and temperatures. We find that increasing the prestretch λ0 of the filler network leads to a large increase in Γc mainly at temperatures well above the glass transition temperature of the elastomers, where viscoelasticity is inactive, but also at lower temperatures where both mechanisms are coupled. Yet, we show that there is no direct linear relation between the extent of filler network scission and Γc. We mainly attribute the large increase in Γc to the dilution of highly stretched strands in the entangled and unstretched matrix, which delocalizes stress upon bond scission and effectively protects the matrix network from scission and the material from crack growth. Delaying the localization of bond scission by network design is a promising strategy that will guide molecular designs able to toughen elastomers even in the absence of viscoelastic dissipation.
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Slootman, J., Yeh, C. J., Millereau, P., Comtet, J., & Creton, C. (2022). A molecular interpretation of the toughness of multiple network elastomers at high temperature. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 119(13). https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2116127119
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