Softening of the Hertz indentation contact in nematic elastomers
Abstract
Polydomain liquid crystalline (nematic) elastomers have highly unusual mechanical properties, dominated by the dramatically nonlinear stress–strain response that reflects stress-induced evolution of domain patterns. Here, we study the classical Hertz indentation problem in such a material. Experimentally, we find that polydomain nematic elastomers display a smaller exponent than the classical 3/2 in the load vs. indentation depth response. This is puzzling: asymptotically a softer stress–strain response requires a larger exponent at small loads. We resolve this by theory where three regimes are identified — an initial elastic regime for shallow indentation that is obscured in experiment, an intermediate regime where local domain pattern evolution leads to a smaller scaling in agreement with experiments, and a final stiffening regime where the completion of local domain evolution returns the response to elastic. This three-regime structure is universal, but the intermediate exponent is not. We discuss how our work supports a new mechanism of enhanced adhesion for pressure-sensitive adhesion of nematic elastomers.
Copyright and License
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
Acknowledgement
This work has been funded by ERC H2020 (Advanced grant 758669), and the US Office of Naval Research (MURI grant N00014-18-1-2624). All authors approved the final version of the manuscript.
Supplemental Material
Files
Name | Size | Download all |
---|---|---|
md5:e8eab327af24b39708f6a2e0cf44804b
|
6.0 MB | Preview Download |
Additional details
- European Research Council
- 758669
- Office of Naval Research
- N00014-18-1-2624
- Accepted
-
2023-07-21
- Available
-
2023-07-31Available online
- Available
-
2023-08-09Version of record
- Caltech groups
- Division of Engineering and Applied Science (EAS)
- Publication Status
- Published