Fitter Frames: Nanotubes Boost Structural Integrity of Composites
Researchers at Rensselaer have
discovered a new technique for provoking unusual crazing
behavior in epoxy composites. The crazing, which causes
the composite to deform into a network of nanoscale
pillar-like fibers that bridge together both sides of a
crack and slow its growth, could lead to tougher, more
durable components for aircraft and
automobiles.
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New research finding could lead to more durable
aircraft, automotive components
A new research discovery at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
could lead to tougher, more durable composite frames for
aircraft, watercraft, and automobiles.
Epoxy composites are increasingly being incorporated into
the design of new jets, planes, and other vehicles. Composite
material frames are extremely lightweight, which lowers the
overall weight of the vehicle and boosts fuel efficiency. The
downside is that epoxy composites can be brittle, which is
detrimental to its structural integrity.
Professor Nikhil Koratkar, of Rensselaer’s Department of Mechanical,
Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering, has demonstrated that
incorporating chemically treated carbon nanotubes into an epoxy
composite can significantly improve the overall toughness,
fatigue resistance, and durability of a composite
frame.
When subjected to repetitive stress, a composite frame
infused with treated nanotubes exhibited a five-fold reduction
in crack growth rate as compared to a frame infused with
untreated nanotubes, and a 20-fold reduction when compared to a
composite frame made without nanotubes.
This newfound toughness and crack resistance is due to the
treated nanotubes, which enhance the molecular mobility of the
epoxy at the interface where the two materials touch.
When stressed, this enhanced mobility enables the epoxy to
craze – or result in the formation of a network of pillar-like
fibers that bridge together both sides of the crack and slow
its growth.
“This crazing behavior, and the bridging fibers it produces,
dramatically slows the growth rate of a crack,” Koratkar said.
“In order for the crack to grow, those fibers have to first
stretch, deform plastically, and then break. It takes a lot of
energy to stretch and break those fibers, energy that would
have otherwise gone toward enlarging the crack.”
Results of the study were
published this week in the journal Small.
Epoxy composites infused with carbon nanotubes are known to
be more resistant to cracks than pure epoxy composites, as the
nanotubes stitch, or bridge, the two sides of the crack
together. Infusing an epoxy with carbon nanotubes that have
been functionalized, or treated, with the chemical group
amidoamine, however, results in a completely different bridging
phenomenon.
At the interface of the functionalized nanotubes and the
epoxy, the epoxy starts to craze, which is a highly unusual
behavior for this particular type of composite, Koratkar said.
The epoxy deforms, becomes more fluid, and creates connective
fibers up to 10 microns in length and with a diameter between
100 nanometers and 1,000 nanometers.
“We didn’t expect this at all. Crazing is common in certain
types of thermoplastic polymers, but very unusual in the type
of epoxy composite we used,” Koratkar said. “In addition to
improved fatigue resistance and toughness, the treated
nanotubes also enhanced the stiffness, hardness, and strength
of the epoxy composite, which is very important for structural
applications.”
Koratkar said the aircraft, boat, and automobile industries
are increasingly looking to composites as a building material
to make vehicle frames and components lighter. His research
group plans to further investigate crazing behavior in epoxy
composites, in order to better understand why the chemical
treatment of nanotubes initiates crazing.
Co-authors of the paper include Rensselaer Associate
Professor
Catalin Picu, of the Department of Mechanical, Aerospace,
and Nuclear Engineering; Rensselaer doctoral students Wei Zhang
and Iti Srivastava; and Yue-Feng Zhu, professor in the
Department of Mechanical Engineering at Tsinghua University in
China.
Visit Koratkar’s
Web site for more information on his nanomaterials
research.
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