Key Engineering Materials Vol. 423 (2010) pp 167-172
© (2010) Trans Tech Publications, Switzerland
doi:10.4028/www.scientific.net/KEM.423.167
Creep and stress relaxation of hybrid organic-inorganic aerogels
N. de la Rosa-Fox1, J. A. Toledo Fernández1, V. Morales-Flórez2,
M. Piñero3, L. Esquivias4
1
Dpto. Física de la Materia Condensada, Universidad de Cádiz. España
2
Física de Materiales. ICMSE-CSIC. Sevilla. España.
3
Dpto. Física Aplicada, CASEM, Universidad de Cádiz, España.
4
Dpto Física de la Materia Condensada, Universidad de Sevilla. España
nicolas.rosafox@uca.es,
Keywords: organic-inorganic hybrid aerogel, uniaxial compression, nanoindentation, creep
compliance, stress relaxation.
Abstract.
Organic/inorganic hybrids silica aerogels were synthesized by the classical sol-gel method with
application of high power ultrasounds to the liquid mixture. Precursors were tetraethoxysilane
(TEOS), as inorganic phase, and polydimethyl siloxane (PDMS), as organic one. These hybrid
organic-inorganic materials are known as ORMOSIL (ORganically MOdified SILicates).
Monolithic aerogels were obtained by supercritical drying in ethanol. Failure tests by uniaxial
compression shows an increase of the rupture modulus as well as a decrease of the Young’s
modulus with the polymer content, tuning from a brittle solid to a rubbery-like one. These hybrid
aerogels behave as elastomers showing a decrease in the relaxation viscoelastic modulus.
Nanoindentation tests have been performed in these hybrid aerogels: load/unload cycles about 1.5
mN of maximum load have shown a decreasing value of the reduced modulus, as well as both
plastic and elastic work with the organic content, while hardness remains almost constant. Elastic
recovery parameter rised with the increasing organic content. Results from creep tests made with
uniaxial compression configuration are discussed and compared with nanoindentation. Viscoelastic
behavior of these hybrids materials can be described by a rheological model.
Introduction
Organic/inorganic hybrid silica aerogels are nanostructured materials that combine
mechanical and texture properties of a nanoporous silica matrix with those from the organic
polymer phase embedded into it [1]. These kinds of materials gather characteristics that make them
very attractive from a practical point of view because they show optical transparency as well as high
porosity. They also possess some characteristics from organic polymers, such as flexibility, low
density and formability, while the inorganic fraction contributes for increasing surface hardness and
strength, and improving transparency and good optical properties [2].
From a mechanical point of view, their behaviour can be tuned from fragile to rubber,
depending on the content of the organic polymer and the copolymerization degree. This qualitative
change can be explained in terms of the percolation of the organic phase [3]Their structural
applications are restricted due to one of the main drawbacks of silica aerogels: its fragility.
However, a kind of aerogels, tens times stronger than those of typical aerogels, have been
prepared by Leventis´group by means crosslinking silica with some organic polymers on the original
gel skeletons. For this, they used 3-aminopropyltriethoxysilane as a co-precursor to obtain wet gels
with amino groups on their surfaces. The reinforced of the network was achieved by connecting the
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168
Mechanical Properties of Solids XI
terminal amino groups with polymerizing epoxides [4] or isocyanates [5]. This type of materials
shows densification and inelastic hardening upon compression beyond the yield point.
The viscoelastic behaviour of silica aerogels has been also characterized by other authors by
means of acoustic techniques, based on the analysis of thickness resonances of air-surrounded
aerogel plates at ultrasonic frequencies [6]. They reported that shear modulus (G) and shear loss (tan
δG) exhibit a similar behavior to those reported for some kind of organic polymers for which the
interpretation given is based on non-local cooperative interactions of large molecules which could
also be applied to aerogels[7]. Non-linear viscoelasticity is based on the time evolution of the stress
relaxation and the creep compliance [8, 9]. Several rheological models can be used to evaluate the
mechanical behaviour [10], all of them based on the combination of spring and dashpot.In this way,
viscoelastic behaviour of organically modified silica aerogels (ORMOSIL) synthesised with the
organic polymer Polydimethyl siloxane (PDMS) has been analyzed and described elsewhere, by
means of uniaxial compression and nanoindentation techniques [11]. It was reported that the
inclusion of polymeric organic chains in inorganic silica aerogel matrix produces a rubbery-like
material, whose macroscopic elastic modulus decreases with the polymer content and matches
satisfactorily the values obtained by nanoindentation.
The present work studies the viscoelastic behaviour of this type of organic-inorganic hybrid
silica aerogels. Comparison between recovery during stress relaxation testing in compression and
creep data from nanoindentation has been carried out for this insight.
Experimental procedure
Silica gels were synthesized by the classical sol–gel method by means of a two-step procedure.
First TEOS (tetraethoxysiloxane), as inorganic phase, was partially hydrolyzed under
stoichiometrically with acid water (pH =1) in a molar ratio of TEOS:H2O of 1:0.84. At this step the
solution received an ultrasonic energy dose of 320 J cm-3 resulting a transparent and homogeneous
solution. In the second step PDMS(polydimethylsiloxane), as organic phase, was added to complete
the hydrolysis reaction with a molar ratio TEOS:H2O of 1:3.16 with an application of another 320 J
cm-3 ultrasonic energy dose. Several PDMS content were used as the weight percent of the total
silica content in the sample. The liquid sol was kept in hermetically close container until gelification
took place, and the resulting gel was further immersed in an extra volume of ethanol in order to
accelerate the aging process and to expel the residual water from the pores. This way provided
aerogels with PDMS content up to 60 % by weight referred to the nominal content in silica.
The supercritical drying, was conducted in an autoclave, with ethanol (260 º C and 90 bar),
which allows the simultaneous drying of up to 12 cylindrical samples about 3 cm height and 0.7 cm
radius. Several aerogel monolithic pieces were obtained, whose specific surfaces varied in a range
of 400 to 900 m2 g-1. Thermogravimetric analysis were perfomed to elucidate if the organic chains
were affected by drying temperature, showing that this supposition may be neglected. As a matter of
fact, the hybrid organic-inorganic silica aerogels have been obtained without organic chain
degradation by thermal decomposition. The structure is depicted by the organic chain cross linking
bonding the porous silica clusters via the copolymerization between TEOS and PDMS silanol
terminated.The whole thermal and textural and structural characterization process for these samples
have been previously described [1]
Nanoindentation creep test was carried out on a hybrid organic/inorganic aerogel with 40
wt.% of PDMS. A Nanotest automatic device from MicroMaterials Ltd. (UK) equipped with a
diamond indenter with Berkovich pyramidal tip (100 nm diameter) was used for this study. Load–
depth curves were recorded in 25 indentations in line at 20 µm distances, using maximum loads up
to 4mN and load rates ranging between 5 to 75 µN/s. Maps were registered on 10×10 grid
indentations with 10 µm apart each one, surface was polished at optical level. Creep data were
collected along 3000 s, in a cabinet with controlled humidity around 40% and temperature of 28 ºC.
The tests were run under different loads in the range from 0.3 to 1.5 mN.
Key Engineering Materials Vol. 423
169
Pure silica aerogel and hybrid aerogel with 40% wt. of PDMS were also tested for failure
with a Shimadzu universal machine equipped with a 5 kN load cell in the uniaxial compression, and
the same configuration test was applied for the stress relaxation study. A series of test curves at
different constant loads were recorded during 2000 s, at room temperature, on cylindrical samples
0.8 cm diameter, 1.4 cm height. All the stress relaxation experiments were performed on an aerogel
sample with 50 wt % PDMS, preliminary strain recovery observed was highest.
Results and discussion
Failure tests by uniaxial compression shows an increase of the rupture modulus as well as a
decrease of the Young’s modulus with the polymer content, tuning from a brittle solid to an
elastomeric one (Fig. 1).
30
pure silica aerogel
PDMS 40%/TEOS
Fig. 1. Stress-strain plot for comparing the elastic
behaviour and the maximum rupture stress
between pure silica aerogel (solid circles) and an
organic-inorganic 40 wt% PDMS hybrid silica
aerogel sample (solid triangles).
σ (MPa)
20
10
0
0,0
0,1
0,2
0,3
0,4
ε (%)
Some plastic deformation is observed for the pure silica aerogel due to the collapse of the
pore structure, whereas the hybrid aerogel behaves as an elastomer, showing large strains at low
stresses. At high strain it is apparent the increases of the elastic modulus for the hybrid sample,
transient from 40 MPa to 122 MPa, the highest value being similar to that obtained from the pure
silica aerogel at lower strain (144 MPa). Under compression the PDMS chains behaves as the softer
structure is folded by the chemical bonds Si-O-Si, which allows a maximum strain of 25%, just
around the value in which an abrupt slope change is observed. Then we can suppose that starting
from here, till failure, the mechanical behaviour is conducted by the silica clusters which behave as
the stiffer structure.
Creep strain in nanoindentation was analyzed on hybrid organic-inorganic aerogel with 40
wt.% of PDMS. This parameter can be related to some structural parameters [12]. In this way the
creep compliance can be also studied. It shows how the material acts under a constant load, and it
can be defined as
J (t ) =
ε (t )
σ0
Being impossible to define the classical strain in nanoindentation experiments, in the
literature the expression for this purpose can be found [13]. For a Berkovich tip, the indenter is
considered as cone-shaped of semi-apical effective angle θ=70.32º, bearing in mind that this fact
implies an error lower than 3%. Then, the creep compliance can be expressed as follows:
J (t ) =
A( t ) tg θ
P0
170
Mechanical Properties of Solids XI
where A(t) is the depth-dependent contact area for the Berkovich tip A( t ) = 24.5h2 with h being the
depth rate and P0 is the applied load.
For this sample, the creep compliance data were obtained at four different constant loads of
0.3 mN, 0.5 mN, 1.0 mN, and 1.5 mN, and are depicted v.s time in Fig. 2a). It is clearly evident the
existence of two linear regimes in the three curves corresponding to 0.3, 0.5 and 1.0 mN constant
load , which are transformed into only one straigth for the load of 1.5 mN.
The J(t) behaviour in the first linear regime, which ends at about 600 s, correspond to the
response of the porous glass structure network, which deforms instantly. At higher time begins the
second linear regime behaviour where the increase of J (t) values, for the curves at 0.3 and 0.5 mN,
is related to the viscoelastic nature of the system. It is important to appreciate, in the curve of 0.3
mN load, a saturation at 3000 s that would indicate the start of a rubbery state of viscous flow. The
increase of J (t) with the load (50 to 110 GPa-1) is indicative of the viscoelastic nature of these
organic-inorganic hybrid aerogels. Fig. 2b) it allows to differentiate softer from stiffer surface sites
and a pore site with a constant creep compliance and an increase when the tip touch the pore wall.
120
a)
Aerogel/PDMS 40%
110
100
-1
90
80
J(t) GPa
J(t) Gpa
-1
140
130
120
110
100
90
70
1.5 mN
1.0 mN
0.5 mN
0.3 mN
60
50
b)
Aerogel/PDMS 40%
stiff site
P 0=0.5 mN
80
pore site
70
60
soft site
50
40
40
10
100
10
1000
100
1000
t(s)
t(s)
Fig.2 a) Creep compliance curves dependence of load stress for nanoindentation experiments performed on
PDMS 40 wt.% organic-inorganic hybrid silica aerogel
Fig.2 b) Creep compliance curves performed at three different surface sites at constant load of 0.5 mN,
revealing different mechanical behaviours at nanometric scale.
Stress relaxation data from uniaxial compression at constant strain, give the relaxation
modulus rate as:
σ (t )
G (t ) =
ε0
giving information about the general viscoelastic behaviour. The obtained results for the PDMS 50
wt % organic-inorganic hybrid aerogel at different constant strain are presented in Fig. 3a). The
observed increase of the relaxation modulus run parallel with the deformation applied. All measured
data were fitted to a bi-exponential equation (Fig. 3b), which provided good fit, visually and in
terms of the correlation coefficients. These values obtained in the early stage corresponds with a fast
response of the polymer chains which acts as an elastic spring within the range. Then the collapse of
porous silica clusters under compression gives the viscoelastic response and, finally, the viscous
flow behaviour of the organic chains acts as a damper.
Under these conditions, the bulk presents a rheological behaviour described by Burger model
which results from the combination of Kelvin and Maxwell parallel elements [14]. Also,
considering the modelled bi-exponential equation, if y0=18 MPa as the relaxation modulus G (inset
of Fig. 3b), the macroscopic result agrees with the microscopic interpretation of the mechanical
behaviour given by nanoindentation techniques. Inasmuch as the creep compliance at t=0, known as
Key Engineering Materials Vol. 423
171
instantaneous value, verifies that G=1/J for J=50 GPa-1 that correspond to G=20 MPa in agreement
with the bi-exponential fit.
PDMS 50 wt.%
a)
b)
strain (ε %)
35 %
33 %
32 %
31 %
30 %
27 %
25 %
22 %
18 %
14 %
9%
4%
8
20
Chi^2/DoF
= 0.00029
R^2
= 0.99702
σ (MPa)
σ (MPa)
16
Data: aero43vc11b_A
Model: ExpDec2
Equation: y = A1*exp(-x/t1) + A2*exp(-x/t2) + y0
Weighting:
y
No weighting
19
y0
A1
t1
A2
t2
17.91636
0.96747
47.99682
0.93511
735.49984
±0.00358
±0.00863
±0.85277
±0.00384
±10.05391
1000
1500
2000
18
0
0
900
1800
time (s)
0
500
time (s)
Fig. 3 a) Stress relaxation curves at several different constant strain for PDMS 50 % silica aerogel sample.
Outlined strains on the right correspond to the reached values for the experiment.
Fig. 3 b) Curve fitting to a bi-exponential model showing the parameters in the inset.
Conclusions
Organically modified PDMS-silica aerogels are homogeneous materials whose physical and
mechanical properties, may vary according to the organic phase content. Failure tests by uniaxial
compression shows an increase of the rupture modulus, from 8 MPa for pure silica aerogel to 28
MPa for a PDMS 40 wt % content. as well as a decrease of the Young’s modulus from 144 MPa for
pure silica aerogel to 40 MPa for PDMS 50 wt % content. These hybrid aerogels behave as
elastomers showing a evolution in the relaxation viscoelastic modulus rate.
The model of microscopic mechanical behavior of hybrid allow us to describe the aerogel as
viscoelastic material, in which there are two regimes of non-linear elastic behavior. Macroscopic
interpretation provides that the Burger’s model is in good agreement with the microscopic level
results.
Acknowledgements
This work has been financed by the projects MAT2005-01583, from the Ministerio de
Educación y Ciencia (España), and by the financial support of the Junta de Andalucía to the team
TEP-115.
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