| Literature DB >> 28916752 |
Qin Xu1,2, Katharine E Jensen1,2, Rostislav Boltyanskiy2, Raphaël Sarfati2, Robert W Style3,4, Eric R Dufresne5,6.
Abstract
Surface stress, also known as surface tension, is a fundamental material property of any interface. However, measurements of solid surface stress in traditional engineering materials, such as metals and oxides, have proven to be very challenging. Consequently, our understanding relies heavily on untested theories, especially regarding the strain dependence of this property. Here, we take advantage of the high compliance and large elastic deformability of a soft polymer gel to directly measure solid surface stress as a function of strain. As anticipated by theoretical work for metals, we find that the surface stress depends on the strain via a surface modulus. Remarkably, the surface modulus of our soft gels is many times larger than the zero-strain surface tension. This suggests that surface stresses can play a dominant role in solid mechanics at larger length scales than previously anticipated.Solid surface stress is a fundamental property of solid interfaces. Here authors measure the solid surface stress of a gel, and show its dependence on surface strain through a surface modulus.Entities:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28916752 PMCID: PMC5601460 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-017-00636-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Fig. 1A solid meniscus in soft adhesion. a, b Schematic of the experiment at a initial contact and b during quasi-static pull. c–f Raw snapshots of a 17.4-μm-radius sphere adhered to an initially flat, compliant (E = 5.6 kPa) silicone gel substrate as it is pulled quasi-statically from c first contact to f the last measured stable position (scale bar in c: 20 μm). g Mapped deformation profiles (black points) corresponding to (c)–(f), with predictions of classic elastic theory[17, 18] overlaid at left (red lines), and best-fit constant total curvature surfaces overlaid at right (green lines) (scale bar: 20 μm)
Fig. 2Macroscopic contact angle and microscopic wetting profiles. a Schematic of the strain-dependent wetting experiments, using a biaxial stretcher as described in ref. [50]. b Detail of the contact line geometry at intermediate scales. c Detail of the contact line at microscopic scales, much less than ϒ/E. At this scale, the geometry of the contact line is given by a vector balance of the surface stresses as shown. d, e Macroscopic wetting profiles of large glycerol droplets sitting on unstretched and stretched ( = 0.09) silicone gels. f Superimposed boundaries for the drops on the stretched (blue) and unstretched (red) substrates show no difference in the macroscopic contact line geometry (scale bar: 400 μm). g Microscopic wetting profiles for a single droplet on unstretched (red), 9% stretched (blue), and 18% stretched (pink) silicone gel substrates, respectively (scale bar: 20 μm). h Local strain near the contact point, , plotted against the applied strain, . Dashed line has a slope of 1. i The opening angle of the wetting ridge, α, increases with the local strain, . In h, i, the error bars are SD of the population
Fig. 3Strain dependence of solid surface stress, ϒ(). The points indicate the average surface stress and average local strain for droplets on the same substrate. The error bars are the SD of the population. The dashed line is a linear fit, providing the surface modulus, Λ = 126 ± 6 mN m−1 and zero-strain surface stress, ϒ0 = 19 ± 3 mN m−1
Measured values of surface stress of similar silicone gels published in the literature
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| Sylgard 184 | 770 | 19 |
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| Gelest | 5.6 | 20 |
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| Sylgard 184 | 2400 | 26 |
[ |
| Dow Corning CY52-276A/B | 3 | 30 |
[ |
| Sylgard 184 | 18 | 30–70 |
[ |
| Sylgard 184 | 1000 | 40–50 |
[ |
| Dow Corning CY52-276A/B | 3 | 42–59 |
[ |