| Literature DB >> 35632906 |
Ruobing Bai1, Jiawei Yang1, Xavier P Morelle1, Canhui Yang1, Zhigang Suo1.
Abstract
Hydrogels of superior mechanical behavior are under intense development for many applications. Some of these hydrogels can recover their stress-stretch curves after many loading cycles. These hydrogels are called self-recovery hydrogels or even fatigue-free hydrogels. Such a hydrogel typically contains a covalent polymer network, together with some noncovalent, reversible interactions. Here we show that self-recovery hydrogels are still susceptible to fatigue fracture. We study a hydrogel containing both covalently cross-linked polyacrylamide and un-cross-linked poly(vinyl alcohol). For a sample without precut crack, the stress-stretch curve recovers after thousands of loading cycles. For a sample with a precut crack, however, the crack extends cycle by cycle. The threshold for fatigue fracture depends on the covalent network but negligibly on noncovalent interactions. Above the threshold, the noncovalent interactions slow down the extension of the crack under cyclic loads.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35632906 DOI: 10.1021/acsmacrolett.8b00045
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Macro Lett ISSN: 2161-1653 Impact factor: 6.903