Thursday, May 8, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : New Self-Healing Polymer Possesses a Quality Never Before Seen at Any Scale

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

Material scientists at Texas A&M have developed a dynamic material that self-heals after puncturing by changing from solid to liquid and back.


What if there were a fabric that, like Superman, could take a bullet and self-heal? Such a super-dynamic, action-powered polymer might actually help protect real-life flyers in space.


Material scientists at Texas A&M University have developed just such a polymer with a unique self-healing property never before seen at any scale. When struck by a projectile, this material stretches so much that when the projectile manages to pass through, it takes only a small amount of the polymer with it. As a result, the hole left behind is much smaller than the projectile itself.

However, for now, this effect has only been observed under extreme temperatures and at the nanoscale.

“This is the first time a material at any scale has displayed this behavior,” said Dr. Svetlana Sukhishvili, a professor in the Department of Materials Science and Engineering, who has been working on development of this polymer film with materials science and engineering professor Dr. Edwin (Ned) Thomas, and then-graduate student Dr. Zhen Sang. Their findings were published in the March/April issue of Materials Today.

“Besides being very cool, the new polymer will likely have many applications, including making the windows of space vehicles more resilient to the onslaught of micrometeoroids,” Thomas said. Space vehicles are frequently bombarded with micrometeoroids traveling at speeds of 10 kilometers per second. A micrometeoroid can create a hole in the window that, while small, is visible to the human eye. However, a window manufactured with a layer of this polymer could potentially sustain damage tinier than the meteoroid itself.

Thomas, who first suggested subjecting the polymer to ballistic testing, said a key goal of the research is to design a material that will protect structures such as orbiting satellites and vehicles in space, with applications for military equipment and body armor on Earth.

The phenomenal behavior occurs in the new solid polymer film as it melts when impacted by a laser-launched high-speed projectile, and snaps back to its original shape when cooled. The polymer does this by absorbing much of the kinetic energy generated by the projectile, causing the film to stretch and liquify as the projectile continues its journey, finally piercing the film. Once pierced, the polymer quickly cools, its covalent bonds reform, and it returns to its original solid state, leaving a tiny hole.


“A major goal of our work was to see if we could simultaneously provide a material that would absorb a lot of kinetic energy per unit target mass from the high-speed projectile and be capable of very rapid healing of the punctured region,” Thomas said. “We wanted the post-impact material to still be capable of performing its intended function, such as carrying air or liquids and remaining sealed against the loss of such fluids across the material membrane.”

The material is a Diels-Adler Polymer or DAP, so-named by the researchers for its dynamic covalent bond networks that can be broken and reformed. It belongs to a class of materials called Covalent Adaptative Networks or CANs. While other Diels-Adler networks have been reported in the scientific literature, DAP’s specific chemistry, topology and self-healing quality are novel. The DAP acronym could also refer to their polymer as a Dynamic Action-Powered material for its ability to self-heal.


Besides being very cool, the new polymer will likely have many applications, including making the windows of space vehicles more resilient to the onslaught of micrometeoroids


Dr. Edwin (Ned) Thomas

“When we were synthesizing DAPs, we aimed to do it in such a way that the polymers would turn to liquids upon temperature increase,” Sukhishvili said. “Although this feature was introduced to facilitate 3D printing, we thought that due to its ability to liquify upon heating, our polymers could show improved ballistic healing characteristics.


“Polymers are amazing materials, especially DAP materials,” Thomas explained. “Because at low temperatures, they are stiff and strong; then at higher temperatures, they become elastic; and at still higher temperatures, they become an easily flowing liquid. That’s a huge range of property behavior.” What’s more, he said, the process reverses itself. “Nothing else on the planet can do that!


The DAP structure is of long polymer chains containing double carbon bonds that break when severe strain and heat are applied, but quickly reform when cooled, albeit not necessarily in the same configuration.

“Think of the long polymer chains in the fabric as being like a bowl of Ramen noodle soup,” said Sang, who worked on this project for his doctoral research and is first author on the paper. “You can stir it with chopsticks, then freeze it. When you unfreeze it, you can stir it, then refreeze. It will have the same ingredients as before, just in a slightly different appearance.


Sang, who is now an engineer at Apple, Inc., said it wasn’t easy to do ballistic testing at such a small scale until he came across a new research methodology called LIPIT (laser-induced projectile impact testing), recently developed by Thomas and colleagues at MIT. Sang used LIPIT to laser-launch a tiny silica projectile 3.7 micrometers in diameter from a glass slide covered with a thin gold film resting on a one-square inch platform. His target consisted of a thin layer (75 to 435 nanometers) of the super DAP.

An ultrahigh-speed camera with a 3-nanosecond exposure time at 50 nanosecond intervals recorded the action. The research team then used scanning electron microscopy, laser scanning confocal microscopy and an infrared nano spectrometer to view the holes and assess the covalent bonding in the super polymer.


The results were puzzling at first, Sang said, because he could find no holes in the targeted polymer.

“Was I not aiming correctly? Were there no projectiles? What’s wrong with my experiment, I asked myself,” he said. However, when he placed the DAP sample under the infrared nano spectrometer, which combines chemical analysis with high-scale resolution, he was able to see the tiny perforations. “This was actually a surprising, surprising finding,” Sang said. “A very exciting finding!


He explained this behavior can’t yet be recreated at the macro level because the strain rate during perforation of a very thin target material under impact is so much larger than at the nanoscale. “If this strain rate is really high, materials often have unexpected behavior that people don’t usually see under normal circumstances,” Sang said. “With the LIPIT apparatus that we’re using, we’re talking about a strain rate many orders of magnitude higher than for conventional scale bullets and targets. At that perspective, materials behave very differently.


Other coauthors on the paper are materials science doctoral student Hongkyu Eoh; former postdoctoral researchers Drs. Kailu Xiao, Wenpeng Shan and Jinho Hyon; and Dr. Dmitry Kurouski, associate professor in the department of biochemistry and biophysics at Texas A&M.

Sukhishvili and Thomas plan to continue researching the super DAP using different polymer compositions, temperature- and stress-responses. 

“One could even imagine designing DAPs with characteristics such that it would be possible to absorb kinetic energy by breaking DAP bonds, then some of these broken bonds could very rapidly reform – by perhaps having just the right ‘bond reform catalyst’ present in the material – whereby the projectile would have to break these bonds a second (or even multiple times) before the material ultimately heals itself, and is ready for the next ballistic event.


“To date, no material has the requisite time response to deform, break, reform; and then deform, break and reform again during the sub-microsecond interval of a ballistic event,” Thomas said


source: Texas A&M University


Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : MIT engineers print synthetic “metamaterials” that are both strong and stretchy

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

MIT engineers print synthetic “metamaterials” that are both strong and stretchy

A new method could enable stretchable ceramics, glass, and metals, for tear-proof textiles or stretchy semiconductors.

In metamaterials design, the name of the game has long been “stronger is better.


Metamaterials are synthetic materials with microscopic structures that give the overall material exceptional properties. A huge focus has been in designing metamaterials that are stronger and stiffer than their conventional counterparts. But there’s a trade-off: The stiffer a material, the less flexible it is.

MIT engineers have now found a way to fabricate a metamaterial that is both strong and stretchy. The base material is typically highly rigid and brittle, but it is printed in precise, intricate patterns that form a structure that is both strong and flexible.

The key to the new material’s dual properties is a combination of stiff microscopic struts and a softer woven architecture. This microscopic “double network,” which is printed using a plexiglass-like polymer, produced a material that could stretch over four times its size without fully breaking. In comparison, the polymer in other forms has little to no stretch and shatters easily once cracked.


The researchers say the new double-network design can be applied to other materials, for instance to fabricate stretchy ceramics, glass, and metals. Such tough yet bendy materials could be made into tear-resistant textiles, flexible semiconductors, electronic chip packaging, and durable yet compliant scaffolds on which to grow cells for tissue repair.


“We are opening up this new territory for metamaterials,” says Carlos Portela, the Robert N. Noyce Career Development Associate Professor at MIT. “You could print a double-network metal or ceramic, and you could get a lot of these benefits, in that it would take more energy to break them, and they would be significantly more stretchable.”

Portela and his colleagues report their findings today in the journal Nature Materials. His MIT co-authors include first author James Utama Surjadi as well as Bastien Aymon and Molly Carton.


Inspired gel

Along with other research groups, Portela and his colleagues have typically designed metamaterials by printing or nanofabricating microscopic lattices using conventional polymers similar to plexiglass and ceramic. The specific pattern, or architecture, that they print can impart exceptional strength and impact resistance to the resulting metamaterial.

Several years ago, Portela was curious whether a metamaterial could be made from an inherently stiff material, but be patterned in a way that would turn it into a much softer, stretchier version.

“We realized that the field of metamaterials has not really tried to make an impact in the soft matter realm,” he says. “So far, we’ve all been looking for the stiffest and strongest materials possible.”


Instead, he looked for a way to synthesize softer, stretchier metamaterials. Rather than printing microscopic struts and trusses, similar to those of conventional lattice-based metamaterials, he and his team made an architecture of interwoven springs, or coils. They found that, while the material they used was itself stiff like plexiglass, the resulting woven metamaterial was soft and springy, like rubber.

“They were stretchy, but too soft and compliant,” Portela recalls.

In looking for ways to bulk up their softer metamaterial, the team found inspiration in an entirely different material: hydrogel. Hydrogels are soft, stretchy, Jell-O-like materials that are composed of mostly water and a bit of polymer structure. Researchers including groups at MIT have devised ways to make hydrogels that are both soft and stretchy, and also tough. They do so by combining polymer networks with very different properties, such as a network of molecules that is naturally stiff, which gets chemically cross-linked with another molecular network that is inherently soft. Portela and his colleagues wondered whether such a double-network design could be adapted to metamaterials.


“That was our ‘aha’ moment,” Portela says. “We thought: Can we get inspiration from these hydrogels to create a metamaterial with similar stiff and stretchy properties?


Strut and weave

For their new study, the team fabricated a metamaterial by combining two microscopic architectures. The first is a rigid, grid-like scaffold of struts and trusses. The second is a pattern of coils that weave around each strut and truss. Both networks are made from the same acrylic plastic and are printed in one go, using a high-precision, laser-based printing technique called two-photon lithography.


The researchers printed samples of the new double-network-inspired metamaterial, each measuring in size from several square microns to several square millimeters. They put the material through a series of stress tests, in which they attached either end of the sample to a specialized nanomechanical press and measured the force it took to pull the material apart. They also recorded high-resolution videos to observe the locations and ways in which the material stretched and tore as it was pulled apart.

They found their new double-network design was able stretch three times its own length, which also happened to be 10 times farther compared to a conventional lattice-patterned metamaterial printed with the same acrylic plastic. Portela says the new material’s stretchy resistance comes from the interactions between the material’s rigid struts and the messier, coiled weave as the material is stressed and pulled.


Think of this woven network as a mess of spaghetti tangled around a lattice. As we break the monolithic lattice network, those broken parts come along for the ride, and now all this spaghetti gets entangled with the lattice pieces,” Portela explains. “That promotes more entanglement between woven fibers, which means you have more friction and more energy dissipation.


In other words, the softer structure wound throughout the material’s rigid lattice takes on more stress thanks to multiple knots or entanglements promoted by the cracked struts. As this stress spreads unevenly through the material, an initial crack is unlikely to go straight through and quickly tear the material. What’s more, the team found that if they introduced strategic holes, or “defects,” in the metamaterial, they could further dissipate any stress that the material undergoes, making it even stretchier and more resistant to tearing apart.


You might think this makes the material worse,” says study co-author Surjadi. “But we saw once we started adding defects, we doubled the amount of stretch we were able to do, and tripled the amount of energy that we dissipated. That gives us a material that’s both stiff and tough, which is usually a contradiction.


The team has developed a computational framework that can help engineers estimate how a metamaterial will perform given the pattern of its stiff and stretchy networks. They envision such a blueprint will be useful in designing tear-proof textiles and fabrics.

“We also want to try this approach on more brittle materials, to give them multifunctionality,” Portela says. “So far we’ve talked of mechanical properties, but what if we could also make them conductive, or responsive to temperature? For that, the two networks could be made from different polymers, that respond to temperature in different ways, so that a fabric can open its pores or become more compliant when it’s warm and can be more rigid when it’s cold. That’s something we can explore now.”

This research was supported, in part, by the U.S. National Science Foundation, and the MIT MechE MathWorks Seed Fund. This work was performed, in part, through the use of MIT.nano’s facilities.


source: MIT News

Wednesday, May 7, 2025

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share : SABIC features specialty thermoplastics that help address challenges with higher-voltage electrical applications

Today's KNOWLEDGE Share

SABIC, a global leader in the chemical industry, is showcasing here at PCIM Europe 2025, in Hall 7, Booth 140, high-heat specialty thermoplastics well suited for demanding electrical applications, including components used in electric vehicles (EVs). The company’s exhibit features Nichicon Corporation capacitors made with ultra-thin ELCRES™ HTV150 dielectric film. These advanced film capacitors for AC-DC inverters can operate at high temperatures up to 150°C with minimal derating of applied voltage (V), which will be discussed in two technical presentations during the event. Also, SABIC is launching a new extrusion grade of ULTEM™ resin with productivity and other advantages over incumbent materials used in magnet wire insulation for EV motors.

Higher voltages are a common theme across electrical applications from connectors and capacitors to wire and cable,” said Sergi Monros, vice president, SABIC Polymers, Specialties BU. “While high voltages can increase operational efficiency, they present challenges. SABIC continues to lead and innovate in this space. Our specialty materials perform well under exposure to high voltages, high temperatures and harsh conditions, helping customers deliver next-generation electrified components.


Minimizing Voltage Derating in Film Capacitors

Exposure to elevated temperatures can significantly lower the rated voltage of polymer film capacitors. For example, the rated voltage for capacitors made with biaxially oriented polypropylene (BOPP) film may be reduced by up to 50 percent at 125°C or above, requiring thicker gauges to compensate. However, recent testing by Nichicon showed that capacitors made with SABIC’s ELCRES HTV150 dielectric film experienced minimal derating (4.8 percent at 130°C and 14 percent at 150°C). SABIC is displaying this dielectric film and sample Nichicon capacitors at its booth.

SABIC’s Chief Scientist Adel Bastawros, Ph.D., is speaking on these voltage derating test results from Nichicon at the E-Mobility & Energy Storage Stage (Nuremberg, Hall 6, 220) on Tuesday, May 6 at 15:00 CET, and at the PCIM Conference (Athen Stage) on Thursday, May 8 at 14:00 CET. His presentation, titled “HTV150 Dielectric Film for High Heat DC-Link Capacitors with Minimal Derating of Operating Voltage,” is based on a technical paper co-authored with experts from SABIC and Nichicon.


Improving Magnet Wire Insulation

Demands for faster charging and greater range have led to the development of 800V EV electric traction motors. The high-voltage e-motors require magnet wires with improved insulation. Compared to extruded polyether ether ketone (PEEK) insulation, SABIC’s new ULTEM resin requires no primer and can deliver low and stable Dk at 220°C at up to 30 percent thinner gauges, helping to reduce overall weight and save space. In contrast to thermoset polyimide (PI) enamel coatings, the SABIC resin avoids the use of solvents that emit volatile organic compounds (VOCs), which can pose regulatory challenges. The new ULTEM resin can be used for mono-layer extrusion and requires only one pass, which helps to boost productivity, while enamel requires up to 20 coating passes. SABIC is exhibiting insulated magnet wire using the new ULTEM material at its booth. The new ULTEM resin is available for trialing.


Showcasing Solutions for Diverse Electrical Applications

SABIC is displaying several other electrical components, including a hybrid metal-plastic DC-DC converter housing for EVs that significantly cuts weight and costs vs. an all-aluminum design. Another EV application is a fast charging unit featuring multiple SABIC materials. Also on display are stationary energy storage applications, including enclosures and electrolyzer frames. Other highlights of the company’s exhibit are ULTEM and NORYL™ resins and LNP™ copolymers and compounds with a high comparative tracking index (CTI), which is important in situations where electrical components are exposed to harsh environments or contaminants and high voltages.

PCIM Europe 2025 is being held in Nuremberg, Germany, May 6-8, 2025.


source : SABIC

Chevron Phillips Chemical to Sell Singapore Site to Aster Chemicals

Chevron Phillips Chemical (CPChem) announced that shareholders of Chevron Phillips Singapore Chemicals (CPSC) have reached an agreement to sell their entire stake to Aster Chemicals and Energy through its affiliate Chandra Asri.
Aster is a joint venture between Chandra Asri and Glencore. It has a fully integrated refinery capacity of 237,000 barrels per day, and a 1.1 million metric ton hashtagethylene cracker on Bukom Island, according to the company, as well as downstream chemical assets located on Jurong Island.



The transaction centers on CPSC's hashtaghighdensitypolyethylene manufacturing facility on Jurong Island, Singapore, which boasts an annual production capacity of 400 KTA. All approximately 150 CPSC employees are expected to receive opportunities to transition to Aster.
hashtagCPSC is an excellent strategic fit for Aster, and we are confident the business will thrive as part of its portfolio," said Justine Smith, CPChem executive vice president of commercial. "With this transaction, we are optimizing our asset portfolio to ensure we remain competitive and continue to serve as the supplier of choice to our global customers."

While the deal remains subject to customary closing conditions, hashtagCPChem confirmed its Asia headquarters, which oversees regional sales and marketing operations, will maintain its presence in Singapore.

Aster Chem Global has established itself as a leader in chemical distribution, providing a range of more than 350 products. The company said it has a diverse network of suppliers, enabling it to offer specialized solutions to clients across various industries.
hashtagChevronPhillips Chemical, jointly owned by Chevron USA Inc. and Phillips 66, is a leading global producer of olefins and polyolefins. Headquartered in The Woodlands, TX, the company employs more than 5,000 people and manages approximately $20 billion in assets across 32 manufacturing and research facilities in six countries.
The company is also a major supplier of aromatics, alpha olefins, styrenics, specialty chemicals, polyethylene piping, and polymer resins.

source:Plastics Today/Chevron Phillips Chemical

WORKPLACE FLOOR MARKINGS : Simple Lines. Clear Rules. Fewer Incidents.

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