Catalyst-free chemistry makes self-healing materials more practical
A new catalyst-free, self-healing material system developed by researchers at the University of Illinois offers a far less expensive and far more practical way to repair composite materials used in structural applications ranging from airplane fuselages to wind-farm propeller blades.
The new self-healing system incorporates chlorobenzene microcapsules, as small as 150 microns in diameter, as an active solvent. The expensive, ruthenium-based Grubbs鈥 catalyst, which was required in the researchers鈥 first approach, is no longer needed.
鈥淏y removing the catalyst from our material system, we now have a simpler and more economical alternative for strength recovery after crack damage has occurred,鈥 said Jeffrey Moore, the Murchison-Mallory Professor of Chemistry at Illinois. 鈥淪elf-healing of epoxy materials with encapsulated solvents can prevent further crack propagation, while recovering most of the material鈥檚 mechanical integrity.鈥
The new chemistry is described in a paper accepted for publication in Macromolecules, and posted on the journal鈥檚 Web site.
During normal use, epoxy-based materials experience stresses that can cause cracking, which can lead to mechanical failure. Autonomous self-healing 鈥 a process in which the damage itself triggers the repair mechanism 鈥 can retain structural integrity and extend the lifetime of the material.
鈥淎lthough we demonstrated the self-healing concept with a ruthenium-based catalyst, the cost of the catalyst made our original approach too expensive and impractical,鈥 said Moore, who also is affiliated with the university鈥檚 Frederick Seitz Materials Research Laboratory and with the Beckman Institute. 鈥淥ur new self-healing system is simple, very economical and potentially robust.鈥
In the researchers鈥 original approach, self-healing materials consisted of a microencapsulated healing agent (dicyclopentadiene) and Grubbs鈥 catalyst embedded in an epoxy matrix. When the material cracked, microcapsules would rupture and release the healing agent, which then reacted with the catalyst to repair the damage.
In their new approach, when a crack forms in the epoxy material, microcapsules containing chlorobenzene break. The solvent disperses into the matrix, where it finds pockets of unreacted epoxy monomers. The solvent then carries the latent epoxy monomers into the crack, where polymerization takes place, restoring structural integrity.
In fracture tests, self-healing composites with catalyst-free chemistry recovered as much as 82 percent of their original fracture toughness.
The new catalyst-free chemistry has taken down the barriers to cost and level of difficulty, Moore said. 鈥淔rom an economics and simplicity standpoint, self-healing materials could become part of everyday life.鈥
Source: University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign