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Shock-induced paracrystallinity in PPTA

ORAL

Abstract

The outstanding strength-to-weight ratio of para-aramid fibers, such as Kevlar and Twaron, is largely attributed to their high content of crystalline p-phenylene terephthalamide (PPTA). Atomistic simulations of shock loading on PPTA are performed along the [100] and [010] crystallographic directions, using reactive molecular-dynamics simulations. The reactive forcefield utilized is fitted to PPTA properties using first principles data and the results are validated by ab-initio molecular dynamics (QMD) simulations. Simulation results reveal an anisotropic shock response displaying elastic, crosslinking, and phase transformation from crystalline to para-crystalline phases. While QMD simulations show elastic to amorphous planar transformation for shocks along [010] direction, long time simulations accessible by reactive molecular dynamics indicate the formation of a para-crystalline phase initiated by an amorphous planar transformation, which displays H-bond scission and rotation of chains. The rotation process reorients the polymer chains such that vdW interactions dominate chain-chain interactions leading to the formation of local domains where new H-bond interaction forms leading to the para-crystalline phase.

Presenters

  • Paulo Branicio

    Univ of Southern California

Authors

  • Paulo Branicio

    Univ of Southern California

  • Subodh Tiwari

    Univ of Southern California, Collaboratory for Advanced Computing and Simulations, University of Southern California

  • Sungwook Hong

    Univ of Southern California

  • Daniel Shebib

    Univ of Southern California

  • Rajiv Kalia

    Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California, Collaboratory for Advanced Computing and Simulations, University of Southern California

  • Aiichiro Nakano

    Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California, Collaboratory for Advanced Computing and Simulations, University of Southern California

  • Priya Vashishta

    Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Southern California, Univ of Southern California, University of Southern California, Collaboratory for Advanced Computing and Simulations, University of Southern California