posted on 2024-10-03, 17:05authored byYanxiao Li, Congjie Wei, Steven E. Kooi, David Veysset, Chuanrui Guo, Yuxiang Gan, Ying Zhuo, Genda Chen, Mohammad Naraghi, Keith A. Nelson, Chenglin Wu
Mixed-dimensional nanomaterials composed
of one-dimensional (1D)
and two-dimensional (2D) nanomaterials, such as graphene–silver
nanowire (AgNW) composite sandwiched structures, are promising candidates
as building blocks for multifunctional structures and materials. However,
their mechanical behavior and failure mechanism have not yet been
fully understood. In this work, we have performed integrated experimental,
theoretical, and numerical studies to explore the performance and
failure modes of graphene–AgNW composite under tensile and
impact loading conditions. In situ tensile tests using a nanoindenter,
implemented with a push-to-pull device and a laser-induced projectile
impact test system, are used to shed light on load-bearing mechanisms
in graphene–AgNW composites. Multiple failure modes have been
observed in both experimental setups and analyzed with numerical and
theoretical models. Results show that in the tensile loading the distribution
of AgNW, as characterized by the effective free length, is the key
parameter determining the failure mode. As for the impact failure
scenarios, compared with failure modes observed in pure graphene cases,
the mechanical reinforcing effect of AgNW will transform the failure
mode from a scattered tensile fracture along radial directions to
a shear failure that is constrained in a relatively local domain.
Theoretical analysis using shear lag modeling, Timoshenko plate theory,
molecular dynamics modeling, and finite element modeling approaches
are adopted to further establish the failure modes.