TY - JOUR
T1 - Towards a chemo-mechanical coupled theory of physical hydrogel for sol–gel transition identified by crosslink density
AU - Wu, Tao
AU - Goh, K. B.
AU - Deng, Zichen
AU - Liu, Qimin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Elsevier Ltd
PY - 2022/11/1
Y1 - 2022/11/1
N2 - This paper presents a chemo-mechanical coupled theory of physical hydrogel for bulk phase behavior during reversible sol–gel transition. A free energy density is proposed to account for the crucial elastic, mixing, bonding, and chemical contributions, based on statistical mechanics with Gaussian chain distribution. In particular, the crosslink density is included as a novel mean-field parameter in the free energy density functional, such that modulating the density changes the state of the gel-sol phase, non-trivially. The governing equations are then formulated for force equilibrium and mass conservation, and the constitutive relations are obtained based on the second law of thermodynamics. Moreover, an Allen-Cahn-type kinetic equation is imposed on the crosslink density capturing its spatial and temporal evolution, in which the deformation heterogeneity prescribes the inhomogeneous distribution of the crosslinks. Equilibrium analysis is first conducted for physical hydrogels, indicating that the formation of physical crosslinks is promoted at (i) higher monomer volume fraction, (ii) more extensive polymer chemical potential, (iii) more repulsive Flory interaction parameter, (iv) higher bond activation energy, and (v) longer bonding length. Next, dynamic analysis is performed on a cylindrical specimen subject to a controlled torsion ramp in the framework of continuum mechanics, revealing the fundamental mechanism of the reversible sol–gel transition for physical hydrogels. To show the robustness of our theory, the stress yield shear-thinning phenomenon is simulated, for the first time, achieving a good agreement between the reported experiment data and the numerical results from our approach. The crosslink density is found to play key role in determining the mechanical behavior of physical hydrogels.
AB - This paper presents a chemo-mechanical coupled theory of physical hydrogel for bulk phase behavior during reversible sol–gel transition. A free energy density is proposed to account for the crucial elastic, mixing, bonding, and chemical contributions, based on statistical mechanics with Gaussian chain distribution. In particular, the crosslink density is included as a novel mean-field parameter in the free energy density functional, such that modulating the density changes the state of the gel-sol phase, non-trivially. The governing equations are then formulated for force equilibrium and mass conservation, and the constitutive relations are obtained based on the second law of thermodynamics. Moreover, an Allen-Cahn-type kinetic equation is imposed on the crosslink density capturing its spatial and temporal evolution, in which the deformation heterogeneity prescribes the inhomogeneous distribution of the crosslinks. Equilibrium analysis is first conducted for physical hydrogels, indicating that the formation of physical crosslinks is promoted at (i) higher monomer volume fraction, (ii) more extensive polymer chemical potential, (iii) more repulsive Flory interaction parameter, (iv) higher bond activation energy, and (v) longer bonding length. Next, dynamic analysis is performed on a cylindrical specimen subject to a controlled torsion ramp in the framework of continuum mechanics, revealing the fundamental mechanism of the reversible sol–gel transition for physical hydrogels. To show the robustness of our theory, the stress yield shear-thinning phenomenon is simulated, for the first time, achieving a good agreement between the reported experiment data and the numerical results from our approach. The crosslink density is found to play key role in determining the mechanical behavior of physical hydrogels.
KW - Constitutive theory
KW - Crosslinking
KW - Free energy density
KW - Physical hydrogel
KW - Sol–gel transition
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85136489701&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2022.111921
DO - 10.1016/j.ijsolstr.2022.111921
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85136489701
SN - 0020-7683
VL - 254-255
JO - International Journal of Solids and Structures
JF - International Journal of Solids and Structures
M1 - 111921
ER -