We present a novel type of magnetorheological material that allows one to restructure the magnetic particles inside the finished composite, tuning in situ the viscoelasticity and magnetic response of the material in a wide range using temperature and an applied magnetic field. The polymer medium is an A-g-B bottlebrush graft copolymer with side chains of two types: polydimethylsiloxane and polystyrene. At room temperature, the brush-like architecture provides the tissue mimetic softness and strain stiffening of the elastomeric matrix, which is formed through the aggregation of polystyrene side chains into aggregates that play the role of physical cross-links.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on a new class of magnetoactive elastomers (MAEs) based on bottlebrush polymer networks filled with carbonyl iron microparticles. By synergistically combining solvent-free, yet supersoft polymer matrices, with magnetic microparticles, we enable the design of composites that not only mimic the mechanical behavior of various biological tissues but also permit contactless regulation of this behavior by external magnetic fields. While the bottlebrush architecture allows to finely tune the matrix elastic modulus and strain-stiffening, the magnetically aligned microparticles generate a 3-order increase in shear modulus accompanied by a switch from a viscoelastic to elastic regime as evidenced by a ca.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe magnetodielectric response of magnetoactive elastomers (MAEs) in its dependence on filler concentration, magnetic field, and test frequency is studied experimentally. MAEs are synthesized on the basis of a silicone matrix filled with spherical carbonyl iron particles characterized by a mean diameter of 4.5 µm.
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