Samenvatting
Supercrystalline nanocomposites (SCNCs) are inorganic-organic hybrid materials with a unique periodic nanostructure, and thus they have been gaining growing attention for their intriguing functional properties and parallelisms with hierarchical biomaterials. Their mechanical behavior remains, however, poorly understood, even though its understanding and control are important to allow SCNCs’ implementation into devices. An important aspect that has not been tackled yet is their time-dependent deformation behavior, which is nevertheless expected to play an important role in materials containing such a distribution of organic phase. Hereby, we report on the creep of ceramic-organic SCNCs with varying degrees of organic crosslinking, as assessed via nanoindentation. Creep strains and their partial recoverability are observed, hinting at the co-presence of viscoelasticity and viscoplasticity, and a clear effect of crosslinking in decreasing the overall material deformability emerges. We rationalize our experimental observations with the analysis of stress exponent and activation volume, resulting in a power-law breakdown behavior and governing deformation mechanisms occurring at the organic sub-nm interfaces scale, as rearrangement of organic ligands. The set of results is reinforced by the evaluation of the strain rate sensitivity via strain rate jump tests, and the assessment of the effect of oscillations during continuous stiffness measurement mode.
Originele taal-2 | Engels |
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Artikelnummer | 112000 |
Aantal pagina's | 14 |
Tijdschrift | Materials & Design |
Volume | 231 |
DOI's | |
Status | Gepubliceerd - jul. 2023 |
Bibliografische nota
Funding Information:The authors gratefully acknowledge the financial support from the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation), project numbers GI 1471/1-1 and 192346071-SFB 986. The authors are thankful to Fraunhofer CAN GmbH for the TEM images of the functionalized nanoparticles, Prof. Gerold Schneider (Hamburg University of Technology) for the fruitful discussion, Dr. Jasmin Koldehoff (Hamburg University of Technology) for the assistance with nanoindentation tests, Dr. Hans Jelitto (Hamburg University of Technology) for the assistance with AFM measurements, and Dr. Emad Maawad (Institute of Materials Physics, Helmholtz-Zentrum Hereon) for assistance with the SAXS data acquisition.