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Cylindrical Cavity Expansion: A Novel Method for Characterizing the Mechanical Properties of Soft Materials

Published 23 Aug 2024 in cond-mat.mtrl-sci and cond-mat.soft | (2408.12920v2)

Abstract: The low elastic modulus of soft materials, combined with geometric nonlinearity and rate dependence, presents significant challenges in the characterization of their mechanical response. We introduce a novel method for measuring the mechanical properties of soft materials under large deformations via cylindrical cavity expansion. In this method, a cylindrical cavity is fabricated in the material and expanded by volume-controlled injection of an incompressible fluid with simultaneous measurement of the applied pressure at the cavity wall. The relationship between applied pressure and deformation at the cavity wall is then employed to characterize the nonlinear mechanical properties. We demonstrate the feasibility of the proposed method and validate it by measuring the mechanical properties of synthetic polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) and comparing with reported values in the literature. Results indicate that the cylindrical cavitation method effectively captures the response of PDMS over a wide range of stiffness (shear modulus ranging from 5 kPa to 300 kPa) and exhibit high repeatability. The proposed method overcomes limitations in characterization of ultra-soft materials using traditional testing methods, such as challenges with fabrication and clamping in unaxial tension testing and friction and adhesion effects in compression and indentation testing, thus enabling accurate and precise characterization. It also offers improved accuracy and repeatability over other needle induced cavity expansion methods due to precise control over the initial cavity dimension and shape at the cost of increased invasiveness of testing.

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