Electromechanical deformation and failure of multilayered films
Abstract
Layer thickness was found to have a significant effect on the irreversible electromechanical deformation and the failure mechanism in polycarbonate (PC)/poly (vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) multilayered films when subjected to an electrical impulse in a DC needle‐plane configuration. Three distinct regions of behavior were observed. Region I comprised thick layer systems that exhibited only irreversible center deformation. The improvement to failure resistance compared to the monolithic films was attributed to the interphase between the two components. Region II films with an intermediate layer thickness showed both an irreversible center deformation and a treeing mechanism which were observed to simultaneously occur. The surface treeing mechanism, similar to the lightning treeing phenomena in nature, occurs only at impact rates. The tree morphology showed large amounts of plowing, indicating that this damage mechanism can dissipate a large amount of energy prior to electromechanical fracture of the film. Region III films comprise ultrathin layers in the nanoscale and showed no treeing. The unique interphase region between these ultrathin layers was estimated to be at least ten percent of the overall layered structure. These films behaved similar to monolithic materials with improved electromechanical failure characteristics. This work complements the enhanced dielectric performance of multilayer films observed in earlier investigations.
Document Details
- Document Type
- Pub Defense Publication
- Publication Date
- Dec 10, 2020
- Source ID
- 10.1002/app.50298
Entities
People
- Andrew Olah
- Ci Zhang
- Eric Baer
- Lei Zhu
Organizations
- Case Western Reserve University
- National Science Foundation
- Office of Naval Research