Interfacial fatigue fracture of pressure sensitive adhesives
Pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs) are viscoelastic polymers that can form fast and robust adhesion with various adherends under fingertip pressure. The rapidly expanding application domain of PSAs, such as healthcare, wearable electronics, and flexible displays, requires PSAs to sustain prolonged...
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Zusammenfassung: | Pressure sensitive adhesives (PSAs) are viscoelastic polymers that can form
fast and robust adhesion with various adherends under fingertip pressure. The
rapidly expanding application domain of PSAs, such as healthcare, wearable
electronics, and flexible displays, requires PSAs to sustain prolonged loads
throughout their lifetime, calling for fundamental studies on their fatigue
behaviors. However, fatigue of PSAs has remained poorly investigated. Here we
study interfacial fatigue fracture of PSAs, focusing on the cyclic interfacial
crack propagation due to the gradual rupture of noncovalent bonds between a PSA
and an adherend. We fabricate a model PSA made of a hysteresis-free poly(butyl
acrylate) bulk elastomer dip-coated with a viscoelastic poly(butyl
acrylate-co-isobornyl acrylate) sticky surface, both crosslinked by
poly(ethylene glycol) diacrylate. We adhere the fabricated PSA to a polyester
strip to form a bilayer. The bilayer is covered by another polyester film as an
inextensible backing layer. Using cyclic and monotonic peeling tests, we
characterize the interfacial fatigue and fracture behaviors of the bilayer.
From the experimental data, we obtain the interfacial fatigue threshold (4.6
J/m2) under cyclic peeling, the slow crack threshold (33.9 J/m2) under
monotonic peeling, and the adhesion toughness (~ 400 J/m2) at a finite peeling
speed. We develop a modified Lake-Thomas model to describe the interfacial
fatigue threshold due to noncovalent bond breaking. The theoretical prediction
(2.6 J/m2) agrees well with the experimental measurement (4.6 J/m2). Finally,
we discuss possible additional dissipation mechanisms involved in the larger
slow crack threshold and much larger adhesion toughness. It is hoped that this
study will provide new fundamental knowledge for fracture mechanics of PSAs, as
well as guidance for future tough and durable PSAs. |
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DOI: | 10.48550/arxiv.2410.07506 |