Distinctive viscoelastic and viscoplastic nanomechanics of ionically cross-linked polyelectrolyte complexes under intermittent relaxation and creep
ORAL
Abstract
This study aims to reveal unique nanoscale viscoelastic and viscoplastic properties of ionically linked polyelectrolyte networks. Layer-by-layer PAH/PAA complexes were tested by four continuous loading cycles in aqueous solutions. In each cycle, AFM-nanoindentation via a microspherical tip (R$=$5$\mu $m) was applied up to 1$\mu $N force, followed by a 30-60 sec hold at either a constant indentation depth to measure relaxation, or a constant force to measure creep. At a highly cross-linked, net neutral state (0.01M, pH 5.5), instantaneous modulus increased by 2.7-fold from first to last cycle, while the degree of relaxation (\textgreater 95{\%}) remain consistent. These results indicate repeated loading increases local cross-link density, while relaxation is consistently dominated by cross-link breaking and re-formation. In contrast, under creep, modulus increased by a similar 3.5-fold, and degree of creep is significantly attenuated from $\approx $50{\%} to 45{\%} from first to last cycle. Results from creep suggest constant viscous flow of polymer chains in the absence of permanent anchorage. As a result, an irreversible deformation ($\approx $370nm) was observed after multiple creep cycles, suggesting the presence of viscoplasticity.
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