Onset of Mechanochromic Response in the High Strain Rate Uniaxial Compression of Spiropyran Embedded Silicone Elastomers

Abstract

The molecular processes that accompany dynamic mechanical response to large deformations at high strain rate (≈1000 s−1 or higher) underlie the early stages of damage in materials, but understanding of material response in this regime is typically limited to macroscopic constitutive equations. Here, spiropyran mechanophores are embedded in very short, stress‐bearing strands in silicone elastomers, and their mechanochromic response to uniaxial compression is explored in a Split Hopkinson Pressure (or Kolsky) Bar. At strain rates of 1000 s−1, the onset of mechanochromism occurs at lower strains, but higher stresses, than in the same materials under quasi‐static loading. Similar to quasi‐static loading, however, a negligible effect of mechanophore structure on the critical strain for colorimetric onset is observed. The results suggest that nonequilibrium, inhomogeneous local tension distributions in the elastomers lead to greater stress in individual strands than at the same strains under equilibrium loading, but that within the regions of force concentration, mechanochromic onset is determined primarily by a limiting local strain threshold.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Oct 21, 2020
Source ID
10.1002/marc.202000449

Entities

People

  • James F. Berry
  • Logan S. Shannahan
  • Meredith H Barbee
  • Müge Fermen‐coker
  • Stephen L Craig
  • Yangju Lin

Organizations

  • Duke University
  • United States Army Research Laboratory

Tags

Readers

  • Mechanical Engineering/Mechanics of Materials.
  • Quantum Chemistry