posted on 2017-03-02, 20:04authored byJeffrey T. Paci, Craig T. Chapman, Won-Kyu Lee, Teri W. Odom, George C. Schatz
We
characterize wrinkling on the surfaces of prestrained polystyrene
sheets coated with thin polytetrafluoroethylene skins using a combination
of mechanical strain measurements and 3D finite element simulations.
The simulations show that wrinkle wavelength increases with skin thickness,
in agreement with a well-known continuum model and recent experiments.
The wrinkle amplitudes also increase with strain. Nanoinclusions,
such as holes and patterned lines, influence wrinkle patterns over
limited distances, and these distances are shown to scale with the
wrinkle wavelengths. Good agreement between experimental and simulated
influence distances is observed. The inclusions provide strain relief,
and they behave as if they are attracting adjacent material when the
sheets are under strain. The wrinkles have stiffnesses in much the
same way as do polymers (but at different length scales), a property
that is quantified for polymers using persistence lengths. We show
that the concept of persistence length can be useful in characterizing
the wrinkle properties that we have observed. However, the calculated
persistence lengths do not vary systematically with thickness and
strain, as interactions between neighboring wrinkles produce confinement
that is analogous to the kinetic confinement of polymers.