| Literature DB >> 30966298 |
Nellie Della Schiava1,2, Kritsadi Thetpraphi3, Minh-Quyen Le4, Patrick Lermusiaux5,6, Antoine Millon7,8, Jean-Fabien Capsal4, Pierre-Jean Cottinet9.
Abstract
The overall performance of an electrostrictive polymer is rated by characteristic numbers, such as its transverse strain, blocking force, and energy density, which are clearly limited by several parameters. Besides the geometrical impact, intrinsic material parameters, such as the permittivity coefficient as well as the Young's modulus and the breakdown electric field, have strong influences on the actuation properties of an electroactive polymer and thus on the device's overall behavior. As a result, an analysis of the figures of merit (FOMs) involving all relevant material parameters for the transverse strain, the blocking force, and the energy density was carried out, making it possible to determine the choice of polymer matrix in order to achieve a high actuator performance. Another purpose of this work was to demonstrate the possibility of accurately measuring the free deflection without the application of an external force and inversely measuring the blocking force under quasi-static displacement. The experimental results show good electrostrictive characteristics of the plasticized terpolymer under relatively low electric fields.Entities:
Keywords: actuators; blocking force measurement; deflection; electrostrictive unimorph cantilever; figure of merit; material optimization
Year: 2018 PMID: 30966298 PMCID: PMC6414947 DOI: 10.3390/polym10030263
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1Principle schematic of the electrostrictive actuation.
Figure 2Pertinent parameters and figures of merit for an electroactive polymer.
Figure 3Strain versus electric field squares for different electrostrictive composites.
Characteristics of different electroactive polymers.
| Type | PDMS [ | PU [ | Nylon [ | Neat Terpol [ | Modif. Terpol [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ε | 2.5 | 4.3 | 5 | 35 | 150 |
| Y (MPa) | 2 | 20 | 2000 | 100 | 30 |
| FOMenergy (F²/N) | 2.44 × 10−28 | 0.72 × 10−28 | 0.01 × 10−28 | 9.58 × 10−28 | 586 × 10−28 |
| FOMforce (F/m) | 2.21 × 10−11 | 3.80 × 10−11 | 4.42 × 10−11 | 30.9 × 10−11 | 133 × 10−11 |
| FOMstrain (Fm/N) | 1.11 × 10−17 | 0.19 × 10−17 | 0.22 × 10−19 | 0.31 × 10−17 | 4.42 × 10−17 |
| Breakdown field (V/μm) | 200 | 50 | 30 | 150 | 140 |
PDMS: Polydimethylsiloxane; PU: Polyrethane; FOM: Figure of Merit.
Figure 4Longitudinal strain versus stress for different electrostrictive composites.
Figure 5Breakdown probability versus electric field for different electrostrictive composites.
Figure 6Breakdown probability versus electric field of modified terpolymers with different thicknesses.
Figure 7Fabrication process of a P(VDF-TrFR-CTFE) composite actuator.
Figure 8Photo of the test bench.
Figure 9Photo of the unimorph under different input electric field values.
Figure 10Free displacement versus electric field at 0.1 Hz for two terpolymer compositions.
Figure 11Blocking force versus electric field for two terpolymer compositions.
Figure 12Actuator force versus displacement at 0.1 Hz under different electric fields.
Figure 13Mechanical energy density function of deflection for two compositions of terpolymer for an electric field of 40 V/μm.