posted on 2021-11-15, 21:14authored byChelsea S. Davis, Mitchell L. Rencheck, Jeremiah W. Woodcock, Ryan Beams, Muzhou Wang, Stephan Stranick, Aaron M. Forster, Jeffrey W. Gilman
Scratches
in polymer coatings and barrier layers negatively impact
optical properties (haze, light transmission, etc.), initiate routes
of degradation or corrosion (moisture permeability), and nucleate
delamination of the coating. Detecting scratches in coatings on advanced
materials systems is an important component of structural health monitoring
but can be difficult if the defects are too small to be detected by
the naked eye. The primary focus of the present work is to investigate
scratch damage using fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy (FLIM)
and mechanical activation of a mechanophore (MP)-containing transparent
epoxy coating. The approach utilizes a Berkovich tip to scratch MP-epoxy
coatings under a linearly increasing normal load. The goal is to utilize
the fluorescent behavior of activated MPs to enable the detection
of microscale scratches and molecular scale changes in polymeric systems.
Taking advantage of the amine functionality present in a polyetheramine/bisphenol
A epoxy network, a modified rhodamine dye is covalently bonded into
a transparent, thermoset polymer network. Following instrumented scratch
application, subsequent fluorescence imaging of the scratched MP-epoxy
reveals the extent of fluorescence activation induced by the mechanical
deformation. In this work, the rhodamine-based mechanophore is used
to identify both ductile and fracture-dominated processes during the
scratch application. The fluorescence intensity increases linearly
with the applied normal load and is sensitive to fracture dominated
processes. Fluorescence lifetime and hyperspectral imaging of damage
zones provide additional insight into the local (nanoscopic) environment
and molecular structure of the MP around the fracture process zone,
respectively. The mechanophore/scratch deformation approach allows
a fluorescence microscope to probe local yielding and fracture events
in a powerful way that enhances the optical characterization of damage
zones formed by standard scratch test methods and leads to novel defect
detection strategies.