Effect of folded and crumpled morphologies of graphene oxide platelets on the mechanical performances of polymer nanocomposites
J Shang and YL Chen and YG Zhou and LQ Liu and GR Wang and XL Li and J Kuang and Q Liu and ZH Dai and H Miao and LJ Zhi and Z Zhang, POLYMER, 68, 131-139 (2015).
DOI: 10.1016/j.polymer.2015.05.003
Graphene and its chemical derivate have been taken as promising candidates in composites due to their extraordinary mechanical and physical properties. Different from conventional plate fillers, the embedded graphene fillers exhibit various morphologies (e.g. folded, crumpled, and distorted sheets) inside matrix because of its atomic thickness. In this work, we systematically investigated the influence of graphene oxide (GO) morphologies on the tensile properties of poly(vinyl alcohol)-based nano-composites at low loading contents. Confocal laser scanning microscopy, as a characterization method, was employed to observe the morphologies of the embedded GO platelets. Tensile mechanical tests and in situ micro-Raman spectroscopy tests indicated that GO sheets with larger aspect ratios exhibited efficient interfacial load transfer and improved mechanical properties at ultra-low filler contents. However, with further increased nanofiller contents, the folded and crumpled GO sheets severely degraded the mechanical reinforcement as induced by interfacial debonding. Molecular dynamic simulation indicated obvious stress concentrations on the wrinkle throughout entire graphene platelet areas. Long-term creep tests confirmed the stress concentration eventually induced the decrease in creep resistance for nanocomposite at a high applied stress levels. All these results aided in understanding the mechanical behaviors of two- dimensional nanofiller-based nanocomposites with huge aspect ratios. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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