Chain confinement drives the mechanical properties of nanoporous polymers

Author: Tang Shan   Steven Greene M.   Peng Xiang He   Liu Wing Kam   Guo Zao Yang  

Publisher: Edp Sciences

E-ISSN: 1286-4854|106|3|36002-36002

ISSN: 0295-5075

Source: EPL (EUROPHYSICS LETTERS), Vol.106, Iss.3, 2014-05, pp. : 36002-36002

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Abstract

Recent experiments using nanoindentation and buckling-based metrology (Stafford C. M. et al., Nat. Mater., 3 (2004) 545) have shown the elastic modulus of submicron-nano porous polymers to be lower than that predicted by classical homogenization or finite element simulations, especially at high porosities. This letter presents a model that captures the experimentally observed elastic modulus of nanoporous polymers by assuming that polymer chains are less confined in the interfacial layer close to the free surface of voids than in the bulk. The confinement assumption is incorporated into a recently proposed hyperelastic model, wherein low values of confinement parameters are needed to match the observed mechanical moduli of these materials. Evidence from molecular dynamics and physical experiments further supports the conclusion that variable chain confinement at material interfaces drives the mechanical behavior in nanoporous polymers due to the increasing importance of surface effects. The effect of confinement on instability under compression is also demonstrated since instability may be exploited to create porous polymers with tunable acoustic, electronic or optic properties.