Publications by authors named "Travis Thornell"

Understanding the physical and chemical response of materials to impulsive deformation is crucial for applications ranging from soft robotic locomotion to space exploration to seismology. However, investigating material properties at extreme strain rates remains challenging due to temporal and spatial resolution limitations. Combining high-strain-rate testing with mechanochemistry encodes the molecular-level deformation within the material itself, thus enabling the direct quantification of the material response.

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In this investigation, composite poly(lactic acid) (PLA) systems of hollow glass microspheres (MS) and carbonyl iron particles (CIP) were processed and characterized to investigate the effects of using conductive and insulating particles as additives in a polymer system. PLA-MS and PLA-CIP were set at the two levels of 3.94 and 7.

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Large-format additive manufacturing (LFAM) is used to print large-scale polymer structures. Understanding the thermal and mechanical properties of polymers suitable for large-scale extrusion is needed for design and production capabilities. An in-house-built LFAM printer was used to print polyethylene terephthalate glycol with 30% carbon fiber (PETG CF30%) samples for thermomechanical characterization.

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Polylactic acid (PLA) and poly(ethylene terephthalate glycol) (PETG) are popular thermoplastics used in additive manufacturing applications. The mechanical properties of PLA and PETG can be significantly improved by introducing fillers, such as glass and iron nanoparticles (NPs), into the polymer matrix. Molecular dynamics (MD) simulations with the reactive INTERFACE force field were used to predict the mechanical responses of neat PLA/PETG and PLA-glass/iron and PETG-glass/iron nanocomposites with relatively high loadings of glass/iron NPs.

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Emergent high entropy nanomaterials and their associated complex surface structure hold promise to unlock unique catalytic intermediate pathways and photonic/plasmonic interactions; however, synthetic strategies to tune the size, morphological, and stoichiometric properties remain limited. This work demonstrates a confined electro-precipitation mechanism for the formation of tunable, high-entropy oxide microspheres within emulsion droplet scaffolds. This mechanism complements a traditional confined electrodeposition mechanism and explains the previously observed anomalous formation of thermodynamically unfavorable particles, including lanthanide species.

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Article Synopsis
  • - This study highlights the significance of controlled release of active ingredients, particularly in drug delivery and environmental applications, focusing on using alginate beads for modulated chemical release in marine environments.
  • - Researchers examined multiple factors (like chitosan molecular weight, concentration, calcium concentration, drop height, and bead size) to analyze their effects on the diffusion rates of alginate beads, ultimately refining the analysis to key parameters.
  • - The findings showed that bead size significantly impacted release rates while chitosan molecular weight had minimal influence; this research offers a novel design approach to enhance environmental applications and can guide future optimization efforts in similar scenarios.
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Atomic-force microscopy coupled with infrared spectroscopy (AFM-IR) deciphers surface morphology of thin-film polymer blends and composites by simultaneously mapping physical topography and chemical composition. However, acquiring quantitative phase and composition information from multi-component blends can be challenging using AFM-IR due to the possible overlapping infrared absorption bands between different species. Isotope labeling one of the blend components introduces a new type of bond (carbon-deuterium vibration) that can be targeted using AFM-IR and responds at wavelengths sufficiently shifted toward unoccupied regions (around 2200 cm).

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  • Vitrimers are a unique class of materials that combine the properties of thermosets and thermoplastics, allowing for stability, self-healing, and reprocessing.
  • This study presents a specific type of vitrimer created using a photopolymerized thiol-ene approach, which allows for dynamic chemical exchanges and efficient reprocessing.
  • The research explores how varying reactant proportions can affect the material's properties, highlighting its potential for recycling and broader applications in chemical upcycling.
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Incorporating dynamic covalent bonds into block copolymers provides useful molecular level information during mechanical testing, but it is currently unknown how the incorporation of these units affects the resultant polymer morphology. High-molecular-weight polyisobutylene-b-polystyrene block copolymers containing an anthracene/maleimide dynamic covalent bond are synthesized through a combination of postpolymerization modification, reversible addition-fragmentation chain-transfer polymerization, and Diels-Alder coupling. The bulk morphologies with and without dynamic covalent bond are characterized by atomic force microscopy  and small-angle X-ray scattering, which reveal a strong dependence on annealing time and casting solvent.

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The design of bioinspired polymers has long been an area of intense study, however, applications to the design of concrete admixtures for improved materials performance have been relatively unexplored. In this work, we functionalized poly(acrylic acid) (PAA), a simple analogue to polycarboxylate ether admixtures in concrete, with dopamine to form a catechol-bearing polymer (PAA-g-DA). Synthetic routes using hydroxybenzotriazole (HOBt) as an activating agent were examined for their ability in grafting dopamine to the PAA backbone.

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  • Rapid detection of nerve agent threats is crucial for effective countermeasures, highlighting the need for advanced sensing technologies.
  • This research introduces a new zirconium metal-organic framework (MIP-202(Zr)) that offers improved catalytic capabilities for detecting and degrading diisopropylfluorophosphate (DFP), a nerve agent simulant, compared to traditional catalysts.
  • The study demonstrates that the MIP-202(Zr) sensor has exceptional stability and efficiency, making it suitable for real-time, wearable applications in real-world environments to combat nerve agent threats.
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The fracture-healing behavior of model physically associating triblock copolymer gels was investigated with experiments coupling shear rheometry and particle tracking flow visualization. Fractured gels were allowed to rest for specific time durations, and the extent of strength recovered during the resting time was quantified as a function of temperature (20-28 °C) and gel concentration (5-6 vol %). Measured times for full strength recovery were an order of magnitude greater than characteristic relaxation times of the system.

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