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From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics

Metal-elastomer interfacial systems, often encountered in stretchable electronics, demonstrate remarkably high interface fracture toughness values. Evidently, a large gap exists between the rather small adhesion energy levels at the microscopic scale (‘intrinsic adhesion’) and the large measured mac...

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Autores principales: van der Sluis, Olaf, Vermeij, Tijmen, Neggers, Jan, Vossen, Bart, van Maris, Marc, Vanfleteren, Jan, Geers, Marc, Hoefnagels, Johan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5848928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29393908
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020231
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author van der Sluis, Olaf
Vermeij, Tijmen
Neggers, Jan
Vossen, Bart
van Maris, Marc
Vanfleteren, Jan
Geers, Marc
Hoefnagels, Johan
author_facet van der Sluis, Olaf
Vermeij, Tijmen
Neggers, Jan
Vossen, Bart
van Maris, Marc
Vanfleteren, Jan
Geers, Marc
Hoefnagels, Johan
author_sort van der Sluis, Olaf
collection PubMed
description Metal-elastomer interfacial systems, often encountered in stretchable electronics, demonstrate remarkably high interface fracture toughness values. Evidently, a large gap exists between the rather small adhesion energy levels at the microscopic scale (‘intrinsic adhesion’) and the large measured macroscopic work-of-separation. This energy gap is closed here by unravelling the underlying dissipative mechanisms through a systematic numerical/experimental multi-scale approach. This self-containing contribution collects and reviews previously published results and addresses the remaining open questions by providing new and independent results obtained from an alternative experimental set-up. In particular, the experimental studies on Cu-PDMS (Poly(dimethylsiloxane)) samples conclusively reveal the essential role of fibrillation mechanisms at the micro-meter scale during the metal-elastomer delamination process. The micro-scale numerical analyses on single and multiple fibrils show that the dynamic release of the stored elastic energy by multiple fibril fracture, including the interaction with the adjacent deforming bulk PDMS and its highly nonlinear behaviour, provide a mechanistic understanding of the high work-of-separation. An experimentally validated quantitative relation between the macroscopic work-of-separation and peel front height is established from the simulation results. Finally, it is shown that a micro-mechanically motivated shape of the traction-separation law in cohesive zone models is essential to describe the delamination process in fibrillating metal-elastomer systems in a physically meaningful way.
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spelling pubmed-58489282018-03-14 From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics van der Sluis, Olaf Vermeij, Tijmen Neggers, Jan Vossen, Bart van Maris, Marc Vanfleteren, Jan Geers, Marc Hoefnagels, Johan Materials (Basel) Article Metal-elastomer interfacial systems, often encountered in stretchable electronics, demonstrate remarkably high interface fracture toughness values. Evidently, a large gap exists between the rather small adhesion energy levels at the microscopic scale (‘intrinsic adhesion’) and the large measured macroscopic work-of-separation. This energy gap is closed here by unravelling the underlying dissipative mechanisms through a systematic numerical/experimental multi-scale approach. This self-containing contribution collects and reviews previously published results and addresses the remaining open questions by providing new and independent results obtained from an alternative experimental set-up. In particular, the experimental studies on Cu-PDMS (Poly(dimethylsiloxane)) samples conclusively reveal the essential role of fibrillation mechanisms at the micro-meter scale during the metal-elastomer delamination process. The micro-scale numerical analyses on single and multiple fibrils show that the dynamic release of the stored elastic energy by multiple fibril fracture, including the interaction with the adjacent deforming bulk PDMS and its highly nonlinear behaviour, provide a mechanistic understanding of the high work-of-separation. An experimentally validated quantitative relation between the macroscopic work-of-separation and peel front height is established from the simulation results. Finally, it is shown that a micro-mechanically motivated shape of the traction-separation law in cohesive zone models is essential to describe the delamination process in fibrillating metal-elastomer systems in a physically meaningful way. MDPI 2018-02-02 /pmc/articles/PMC5848928/ /pubmed/29393908 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020231 Text en © 2018 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
van der Sluis, Olaf
Vermeij, Tijmen
Neggers, Jan
Vossen, Bart
van Maris, Marc
Vanfleteren, Jan
Geers, Marc
Hoefnagels, Johan
From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title_full From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title_fullStr From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title_full_unstemmed From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title_short From Fibrils to Toughness: Multi-Scale Mechanics of Fibrillating Interfaces in Stretchable Electronics
title_sort from fibrils to toughness: multi-scale mechanics of fibrillating interfaces in stretchable electronics
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5848928/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29393908
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ma11020231
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