Compressive deformation of a translucent material containing an opaque contrasting filler as a pressure indicator mechanism
POSTER
Abstract
Many strategies have been developed for pressure-indicating materials due to their importance in areas such as monitoring of structural integrity, impact analysis, and food processing. The prevailing technology for pressure-indicating films has its origins in the development of microcapsule-based carbonless copy paper in the mid-20th century, but this approach suffers from material and chemical complexity, non-continuous response, and limited sustainability. In this work, an overlooked mechanism for pressure-responsive color change is demonstrated using cellulose acetate membranes prepared by direct immersion annealing with different loadings of activated charcoal. Compressive plastic deformation of the translucent cellulose acetate leads to a decrease in optical path length and a concomitant increase in the visibility of the opaque contrasting filler. Membranes were characterized by ATR-FTIR, TGA, cross-sectional SEM, AFM, optical microscopy, and gas adsorption properties. A linear relationship between applied pressure and resultant pressure mark brightness in the range of 12–56 MPa was observed for membranes bearing 1–7 wt% activated charcoal. Comparison of pressure mark patterns with cross-sectional SEM supports the importance of the direct-immersion-annealing-based porous morphology for the tuning of indicator sensitivity and dynamic range. A simple drop test was used to illustrate the robustness and utility of these indicators in optical impact assessment.
Presenters
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Justin D Smith
University of Houston
Authors
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Justin D Smith
University of Houston
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Ali Ammar
University of Houston
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Wafa Tonny
University of Houston, Materials Engineering Program, University of Houston
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Samuel Wallaert
University of Houston
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Venkatesh Balan
University of Houston, Department of Engineering Technology, Biotechnology Program, University of Houston
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Megan L Robertson
University of Houston
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Alamgir Karim
University of Houston, University of Houston, TX, USA, William A. Brookshire Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, University of Houston