Publication: Fatigue of double-network hydrogels
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Date
2018
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Elsevier BV
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Citation
Zhang, Wenlei, Xiao Liu, Jikun Wang, Jingda Tang, Jian Hu, Tongqing Lu, and Zhigang Suo. 2018. “Fatigue of Double-Network Hydrogels.” Engineering Fracture Mechanics 187 (January): 74–93. doi:10.1016/j.engfracmech.2017.10.018.
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Abstract
The discovery of tough hydrogels of many chemical compositions, and their emerging applications in medicine, clothing, and engineering, has raised a fundamental question: How do hydrogels behave under many cycles of stretch? This paper initiates the study of the fatigue behavior of the classic PAMPS/PAAM double network hydrogels discovered by Gong and her co-workers (Advanced Materials 15, 1155, 2003). We reproduce the hydrogels, and prepare samples of two types, with or without a crack cut before the test. When an uncut sample is subject to cyclic stretches, internal damage accumulates over thousands of cycles until a steady state is reached. When a cut sample is subject to cyclic stretches, the crack extends cycle by cycle if the amplitude of stretch is above a certain value. A threshold of energy release rate exists, below which the crack remains stationary as the sample is cycled. We find a threshold around 400 J/m2 for hydrogels containing PAAM networks of a low density of crosslinkers, and around 200 J/m2 for hydrogels containing PAAM networks of a high density of crosslinkers. The experimental findings are compared to the Lake-Thomas model adapted to the double-network
hydrogels.
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Keywords
double-network hydrogel, Fatigue fracture, Shakedown, Threshold
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