Asymmetric toughening in the lap shear of metamaterial structural adhesives.

Soft Matter

Department of Mechanical and Aerospace Engineering, University of California, San Diego, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Metamaterial structural adhesives (MSAs) offer enhanced adhesion properties, with features like asymmetric and programmable adhesion, but their performance with thick backing structures is still not well understood.
  • In experiments, MSAs with a thick film (2 mm) showed double the effective adhesion energy compared to solid samples without losing shear strength, aligning with theoretical expectations.
  • However, thinner films (0.5 mm) exhibited significantly higher adhesion and shear strength than predicted, and by adjusting the beam tilt angle, researchers achieved notable variations in adhesion strength and energy, suggesting applications for advanced robotics and wearable technology.

Article Abstract

Metamaterial structural adhesives (MSAs), whose properties primarily rely on structural design, offer promising advantages over traditional adhesives, including asymmetric, switchable, and programmable adhesion. However, the effects of thick backing structures on the adhesion properties remain largely underexplored. Herein, we investigate a series of MSAs featuring a thin adhesive layer and an asymmetric thick beam structure terminated with a film. We conduct lap shear tests on the MSAs with varying terminated film thickness () and beam tilting angle () while maintaining an identical adhesive layer. For MSAs with a thick terminated film ( = 2 mm), the effective adhesion energy is double that of solid samples without compromising shear strength, consistent with the theoretical predictions based on the crack trapping mechanism. Conversely, for MSAs with a thin terminated film ( = 0.5 mm), the maximum shear strength and effective adhesion energy are ∼2.8 times and ∼18.6 times those of solid samples, respectively, deviating significantly from the theoretical predictions due to new crack initiations. We further explore adhesion asymmetry by tuning the beam tilting angle (). For MSAs with highly tilted beams ( = 70.3°), we achieve a maximum adhesion strength asymmetry factor of / ∼ 2.2 for a thick terminated film ( = 2 mm), and a maximum adhesion energy asymmetry factor of / ∼ 5.3 for a thin terminated film ( = 0.5 mm). Our work provides useful insights for designing metamaterial structural adhesives suitable for robotic grippers, wall-climbing robots, and wearable devices, particularly those requiring asymmetric, switchable, and stimuli-responsive adhesion, and adhesives on rough surfaces or in underwater conditions.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sm00410hDOI Listing

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