A nanoscale, visible-light, self-sensing stress probe would be highly desirable in a variety of biological, imaging, and materials engineering applications, especially a device that does not alter the mechanical properties of the material it seeks to probe. Here we present the CdSe-CdS tetrapod quantum dot, incorporated into polymer matrices via electrospinning, as an in situ luminescent stress probe for the mechanical properties of polymer fibers. The mechanooptical sensing performance is enhanced with increasing nanocrystal concentration while causing minimal change in the mechanical properties even up to 20 wt % incorporation. The tetrapod nanoprobe is elastic and recoverable and undergoes no permanent change in sensing ability even upon many cycles of loading to failure. Direct comparisons to side-by-side traditional mechanical tests further validate the tetrapod as a luminescent stress probe. The tetrapod fluorescence stress-strain curve shape matches well with uniaxial stress-strain curves measured mechanically at all filler concentrations reported.
With the availability of nanoparticles with controlled size and shape, there has been renewed interest in the mechanical properties of polymer/nanoparticle blends. Despite the large number of theoretical studies, the effect of branching for nanofillers tens of nanometers in size on the elastic stiffness of these composite materials has received limited attention. Here, we examine the Young's modulus of nanocomposites based on a common block copolymer (BCP) blended with linear nanorods and nanoscale tetrapod Quantum Dots (tQDs), in electrospun fibers and thin films. We use a phenomenological lattice spring model (LSM) as a guide in understanding the changes in the Young's modulus of such composites as a function of filler shape. Reasonable agreement is achieved between the LSM and the experimental results for both nanoparticle shapes-with only a few key physical assumptions in both films and fibers-providing insight into the design of new nanocomposites and assisting in the development of a qualitative mechanistic understanding of their properties. The tQDs impart the greatest improvements, enhancing the Young's modulus by a factor of 2.5 at 20 wt.%. This is 1.5 times higher than identical composites containing nanorods. An unexpected finding from the simulations is that both the orientation of the nanoscale filler and the orientation of X-type covalent bonds at the nanoparticle-ligand interface are important for optimizing the mechanical properties of the nanocomposites. The tQD provides an orientational optimization of the interfacial and filler bonds arising from its three-dimensional branched shape unseen before in nanocomposites with inorganic nanofillers.three-dimensional nanoparticle branching | polymer fibers | nanocomposite films | lattice spring model | tetrapod quantum dot P olymer−nanoparticle composites have become a highly active topic of research with rapidly expanding applications (1), in part because of their high polymer−particle interfacial area and the unique shape-and size-dependent, tunable properties of nanoparticle reinforcements. For example, new polymer nanocomposites have been developed that can optically sense stress concentration (2), are responsive to magnetic, electrical, and thermal actuation (3, 4), and exhibit large changes in elastic modulus and glass transition temperature at low nanoparticle concentrations (5).While theoretical studies show that the Young's modulus of such polymer nanocomposites depends on nanoparticle shape (6), experimental studies are limited. Experimental studies on polymers (7) include the synergistic reinforcement effects of multiple nanocarbons (8) and the shape-dependent reinforcement effects of micrometer-sized tetrapods (9), microscale ceramic needles (10), carbon nanotubes (11), clay-based nanocomposites (12, 13), and others (14). Computational studies include the effects of nanoparticle packing and size on the nanocomposite Young's modulus (15-17). However, the effects of increasing nanoparticle branching on the mechanical behavior of nanocomposite...
The elastic stiffness of two polymer nanocomposite systems is investigated. The nanoscale fillers comprise cadmium selenide (CdSe, ~4 nm) and cadmium selenide/cadmium sulfide (CdSe/CdS, ~13 nm) quantum dots (QDs). The QDs are embedded within an electrospun structural block copolymer, poly(styrene-ethylenebutylene-styrene) (SEBS). Tensile testing shows a monotonic decrease in the tensile Young's modulus with increasing partially phase-separated QD concentration; this is to be compared to corresponding nanocomposites reinforced with nanorod (NR) and tetrapod (TP)-SEBS nanocomposites which show a monotonic increase with particle loading. While most studies to date emphasize the increase in Young's modulus in polymer nanocomposites at higher reinforcement loadings, few focus on the tunability of the modulus from reductions in stiffness. The present work reveals up to an ~80% reduction in tensile Young's modulus with the addition of 5 vol.% of QDs to electrospun SEBS. In this study, we sought mechanistic insight into this reduction in composite stiffness using a 2D lattice spring model. Simulation results reveal that the stiffness decrease with the addition of QD reinforcements is likely due to cavitation in the polymer in the vicinity of the QD aggregates arising from polymer debonding under tension. We anticipate that this study, performed with a commonly-used structural rubber, may find use in designing polymer-matrix nanocomposite fibers with specific Young's moduli for applications requiring a tunable lower stiffness material.
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