|

Under
Embargo Till: 19:00 UTC November 27, 2008 Posted:
19:00 UTC 11/27/2008
Fast
Molecular Rearrangements Hold Key to Plastic’s Toughness
Thursday, November 27, 2008
Plastics are everywhere in our
modern world, largely due to properties that render the materials
tough and durable, but lightweight and easily workable. One of
their most useful qualities, however - the ability to bend rather
than break when put under stress - is also one of the most
puzzling.
This property, described as "plastic flow",
allows many plastics to change shape to absorb energy rather than
breaking apart, says University of Wisconsin-Madison chemistry
professor Mark Ediger. For example, one type of bulletproof glass
stops a bullet by flowing around it without breaking. Regular
window glass, unable to flow in this way, would simply
shatter.
"This is an odd combination of properties...
These materials shouldn't be able to flow because they're rigid
solids, but some of them can," he says. "How does that
happen?"
Ediger's research team, led by graduate
student Hau-Nan Lee, has now described a fundamental mechanism
underlying this stiff-but-malleable quality. In a study appearing
Nov. 28 in Science Express, they report that subjecting a
common plastic to physical stress - which causes the plastic to
flow - also dramatically increases the motion of the material's
constituent molecules, with molecular rearrangements occurring up
to 1,000 times faster than without the stress.
These fast
rearrangements are likely critical for allowing the material to
adapt to different conditions without immediately
cracking.
Plastics are a type of material known to
chemists and engineers as polymer glasses. Unlike a crystal, in
which molecules are locked together in a perfectly ordered array,
a glass is molecularly jumbled, with its constituent chemical
building blocks trapped in whatever helter-skelter arrangement
they fell into as the material cooled and solidified.
While
this atomic disorder means that glasses are less stable than
crystals, it also provides molecules in the glass with some
wiggle room to move around without breaking apart.
"Polymer
glasses are used in many, many different applications,"
including polycarbonate, which is found in popular reusable water
bottles, Ediger says. Aircraft windows are also often made of
polycarbonate. "One of the reasons polymer glasses are used
is that they don't break when you drop them or fly into a bird at
600 miles per hour."
However, their properties can
change dramatically under different physical conditions such as
pressure, temperature, and humidity. For example, many polymer
glasses become brittle at low temperatures, as anyone knows who
has ever dropped a plastic container from the freezer or tried to
work on vinyl house siding in cold weather.
As plastics
become more and more prevalent in everything from electronics to
airplanes, scientists and engineers face questions about the
fundamental properties and long-term stability of these materials
over a range of conditions.
For example, next-generation
commercial aircraft are trending toward including less metal in
favor of higher proportions of lightweight polymer materials -
roughly 50 percent in the new Boeing 787 compared to only 10
percent in the Boeing 777 - and engineers need to know how these
materials will respond to different stresses: a hard landing,
strong winds, or changes in temperature or humidity.
"How
is it going to respond 20 years from now when it gets twisted, or
stretched, or compressed? Is it going to respond by absorbing
that energy and staying intact, or is it going to respond by
breaking bonds and flying apart into pieces?" asks
Ediger.
The Wisconsin team examined the mechanics of a
common plastic called polymethylmethacrylate - also known as
Plexiglas or acrylic - and found that a pulling force had a
pronounced effect on the molecules within the material, speeding
up their individual movements by more than a factor of 1,000. The
team observed internal molecular rearrangements within 50 seconds
that would have taken a full day without the force applied. They
believe this increased motion allows the material to flow without
breaking.
"When you pull on it, you increase the
mobility in the material," Ediger says. "The act of
pulling on it actually transforms the glass into a liquid that
can then flow. Then when you stop pulling on it, it transforms
back to a glass."
The work has benefited from
collaboration between chemists and engineers in a Nanoscale
Interdisciplinary Research Team (NIRT) supported by the National
Science Foundation (NSF), which includes UW-Madison chemical and
biological engineering professor Juan de Pablo and groups at the
University of Illinois and Purdue University.
"From
the most fundamental perspective, we're trying to understand why
pulling on a glass allows it to flow," Ediger says. "The
answer to that question will help us to better model the behavior
of real materials in real applications."
In addition
to Ediger and Lee, the paper is authored by Keewook Paeng and
Stephen Swallen. The work was funded by NSF.
Source: University of
Wisconsin, Madison
Permalink:
http://www.sflorg.com/comm_center/unv_tech/p763_63.html
Time Stamp:
11/27/2008 at 19:00:01 UTC
|
Scientific
Frontline®
RSS
Feeds
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
The
E.A.R.®
World
News Report
Stellar
Nights®
Cassini
Gallery
Mars
Gallery
Missions
Gallery
Observatories
Gallery
Space
Weather Alerts
Events
Directors
Chair
Scientific
Frontline®
Is
supported in part by “Readers Like You”
|