TY - GEN
T1 - Visco-elastic properties of aligned multi-walled carbon nanotube blocks
AU - Suhr, Jonghwan
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Structural components subjected to cyclic stress can succumb to fatigue and fail at stress levels much lower than what is expected under static loading conditions. Such fatigue behavior in nanotube structures has never been reported, albeit its importance in practical devices incorporating nanotube components. In particular, cyclic compression loaded vertically aligned nanotube structures could find various applications as electro-mechanical systems. Here, this work reports the mechanical response from repeated high compressive strains on freestanding, long, vertically aligned multiwalled carbon nanotube membranes and show that the arrays of nanotubes under compression behave very similar to soft tissue and exhibit viscoelastic behavior. Under compressive cyclic loading, the mechanical response of nanotube blocks shows initial preconditioning, hysteresis characteristic of viscoeleastic materials, nonlinear elasticity, stress relaxation, and large deformations. Furthermore, no fatigue failure is observed even at high strain amplitudes up to half million cycles. The outstanding fatigue life and extraordinary soft tissue-like mechanical behavior suggest that properly engineered carbon nanotube structures could mimic artificial muscles, and their added high electrical and thermal conductivity could make excellent candidates for uses as compliant electrical contact brushes, probe cards and electromechanical systems.
AB - Structural components subjected to cyclic stress can succumb to fatigue and fail at stress levels much lower than what is expected under static loading conditions. Such fatigue behavior in nanotube structures has never been reported, albeit its importance in practical devices incorporating nanotube components. In particular, cyclic compression loaded vertically aligned nanotube structures could find various applications as electro-mechanical systems. Here, this work reports the mechanical response from repeated high compressive strains on freestanding, long, vertically aligned multiwalled carbon nanotube membranes and show that the arrays of nanotubes under compression behave very similar to soft tissue and exhibit viscoelastic behavior. Under compressive cyclic loading, the mechanical response of nanotube blocks shows initial preconditioning, hysteresis characteristic of viscoeleastic materials, nonlinear elasticity, stress relaxation, and large deformations. Furthermore, no fatigue failure is observed even at high strain amplitudes up to half million cycles. The outstanding fatigue life and extraordinary soft tissue-like mechanical behavior suggest that properly engineered carbon nanotube structures could mimic artificial muscles, and their added high electrical and thermal conductivity could make excellent candidates for uses as compliant electrical contact brushes, probe cards and electromechanical systems.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/44349101028
U2 - 10.1115/IMECE2007-42611
DO - 10.1115/IMECE2007-42611
M3 - Conference contribution
AN - SCOPUS:44349101028
SN - 079184305X
SN - 9780791843055
T3 - ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, Proceedings
SP - 281
EP - 298
BT - Micro and Nano Systems
PB - American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME)
T2 - ASME International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition, IMECE 2007
Y2 - 11 November 2007 through 15 November 2007
ER -