Quantifying the impact of molecular defects on polymer network elasticity
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract
Elasticity, one of the most important properties of a soft material, is difficult to quantify in polymer networks because of the presence of topological molecular defects in these materials. Furthermore, the impact of these defects on bulk elasticity is unknown. We used rheology, disassembly spectrometry, and simulations to measure the shear elastic modulus and count the numbers of topological "loop" defects of various order in a series of polymer hydrogels, and then used these data to evaluate the classical phantom and affine network theories of elasticity. The results led to a real elastic network theory (RENT) that describes how loop defects affect bulk elasticity. Given knowledge of the loop fractions,…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 58.58
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 28
Authors
5- MZMingjiang ZhongCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- RWRui WangCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- KKKen KawamotoCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- BDBradley D. OlsenCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
- JAJeremiah A. JohnsonCorresponding
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Topics & keywords
- Elasticity (physics)
- Rheology
- Polymer
- Viscoelasticity
- Elastic modulus
- Materials science
- Affine transformation
- Shear modulus