2009 APS March Meeting
Volume 54, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 16–20, 2009;
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Session Q4: Polymer Surface Instabilities
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Wednesday, March 18, 2009
Room: 306/307
Sponsoring
Units:
DPOLY GSNP
Chair: Alfred Crosby, University of Massachusetts Amherst
Abstract ID: BAPS.2009.MAR.Q4.4
Abstract: Q4.00004 : Elastic Instability and Pattern Formation in Confined Soft Elastomeric Films
1:03 PM–1:39 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Animangsu Ghatak
(Department of Chemical Engineering, IIT Kanpur)
When a rigid flat object or a flexible plate is removed from a
thin soft
film, instability patterns appear at the interface in the form of
bubbles or
fingers. The wavelengths of these instabilities are independent
of all
material and geometrical properties of the
system except the thickness of the film. These observations
contrast the
classical Saffman-Taylor type instability in which the
instability pattern
depends on the viscous and surface tension forces in addition to the
thickness of the liquid film. In the case of elastic instability
of the kind
described here, the wavelength depends on the material properties
of the
films only when soft films of different elastic properties are
separated
from each other. In the later case, a co-operative instability mode
develops, which is a non-linear function of the thicknesses and
the elastic
moduli of both the films.
In contrast to the wavelengths of these instabilities, their
amplitudes are
strong functions of several material and geometric properties of
the system.
These problems can be analyzed using regular perturbation
technique to
obtain the excess deformations of the film over and above the base
quantities. Furthermore, by estimating the excess energy of the
system, it
can be shown that instability develops when the films are critically
confined. This point can be illustrated by pre-stretching the
film or simply
by adjusting the contact width between the film and the plate.
The instabilities that develop at the interface are critical to
understanding adhesion and friction of soft thin films as they
act like
nucleated interfacial cracks. We performed a simple experiment,
in which a
flat rigid glass prism is sheared off a soft elastomeric film. At
a given
tangential force, the prism starts to slide on the elastomeric film
accompanied with the formation of bubbles at the interface due to
elastic
instability. These bubbles, the lateral dimensions of which are
comparable
to the thickness of the film, move across the interface with
speeds 1000
times faster than the overall sliding speed of the prism. The
process
continues till the critical condition for fracture is reached.
These studies
may shed some light on the fast dynamics of shear crack
propagation in other
systems.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2009.MAR.Q4.4