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Sticky Crumpled Matter

ORAL

Abstract

 

A sheet which is increasingly confined is forced to bend more and more in order to fit in to the confining volume.  The result is surprisingly stiff, making a crumpled sheet a good packing material, but it is still unclear how to predict exactly how much compression a given crumple can hold.  In this work we discuss how surface/surface interactions (adhesion) affect the compressive strength of a model crumpled polymer sheet.  We combine both experiments and coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations and make three key observations: 1.) crumples increase in compressive strength when adhesion is present.  Surprisingly, the increase is not proportional to the strength of adhesion.  2.) the work done during a compression cycle, however, does depend on the strength of adhesion.  3.) a new lengthscale is required to predict when a sheet is ‘sticky’ or when it is not ‘sticky’.

Publication: This work has been submitted to PRL; We are working on a rebuttal to the reviews so I don't know where this will actually end up.

Presenters

  • Andrew B Croll

    North Dakota State University

Authors

  • Andrew B Croll

    North Dakota State University

  • Wenjie Xia

    North Dakota State University

  • Wathsala Jayawardana

    North Dakota State University

  • Theresa M Elder

    North Dakota State University

  • Yangchao Liao

    North Dakota State University

  • Zhaofan Li

    North Dakota State University