Projects per year
Abstract
Self-healing materials have been intensively studied as materials that can mimic healing properties of biological systems. Reversible polymer networks based on Diels-Alder thermoreversible covalent bonds exhibit great healing performance by controlling the temperature of the system. Despite the attractive applications of self-healing materials, most of them are restricted to the repair of narrow cracks due to their restricted mobility in the solid state. In this work, magnetite (Fe3O4) particles are used to create self-healing magnetic composites. The use of a conventional magnet to apply a magnetic driving force is proposed for the closure of wide damage gaps in the solid state without the need of either mechanical intervention or liquid-like flow inside the material, limiting the structural stability. Thermal, mechanical and chemical characterization of different composites are performed in this study and the healing efficiency is evaluated to assess their potential to close and heal large damage sizes.
Original language | English |
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Article number | 122819 |
Number of pages | 10 |
Journal | Polymer |
Volume | 204 |
DOIs | |
Publication status | Published - 9 Sept 2020 |
Keywords
- self-healing materials
- reversible polymer networks
- Diels-Alder reaction
- magnetic composites
- nanocomposites
- thermal analysis
Fingerprint
Dive into the research topics of 'A novel approach for the closure of large damage in self-healing elastomers using magnetic particles'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.Projects
- 2 Finished
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FWOAL873: Additive Manufacturing for Self-Healing Robotics
Van Assche, G., Vanderborght, B., Van Puyvelde, P., Brancart, J., Safaei, A. & Terryn, S.
1/01/18 → 31/12/21
Project: Fundamental
Research output
- 29 Citations
- 1 Featured article
-
Magnetic self-healing composites enable closing and healing of large damage
Brancart, J. & Cerdan Gomez, K., 19 May 2021, Advances in Engineering.Research output: Contribution to specialist/vulgarizing publication › Featured article › Specialist
Open Access