Publication | Closed Access
Nanoindentation of polymers: an overview
495
Citations
1
References
2001
Year
EngineeringMicromechanicsMechanical EngineeringNanostructured PolymerSoft MatterPolymersPower Law ExponentsPolymer MaterialElasticity (Physics)MechanicsPenetration DepthStressstrain AnalysisNanomechanicsPolymer ChemistryMaterials ScienceMechanical BehaviorPower LawSolid MechanicsNanomaterialsPolymer SciencePolymer CharacterizationMechanics Of Materials
In this paper, the application of instrumented indentation devices to the measurement of the elastic modulus of polymeric materials is reviewed. This review includes a summary of traditional analyses of load-penetration data and a discussion of associated uncertainties. Also, the use of scanning probe microscopes to measure the nanoscale mechanical response of polymers is discussed, particularly with regard to the associated limitations. The application of these methods to polymers often leads to measurements of elastic modulus that are somewhat high relative to bulk measurements with potentially artificial trends in modulus as a function of penetration depth. Also, power law fits to indentation unloading curves are often a poor representation of the actual data, and the power law exponents tend to fall outside the theoretical range. These problems are likely caused by viscoelasticity, the effects of which have only been studied recently. Advancement of nanoindentation testing toward quantitative characterization of polymer properties will require material-independent calibration procedures, polymer reference materials, advances in instrumentation, and new testing and analysis procedures that account for viscoelastic and viscoplastic polymer behavior.
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