1. Field of the Invention
The present disclosure generally relates to assemblies for and methods of producing localized surface wrinkles, and more particularly, to an assembly for and method of producing localized surface wrinkles using a shape memory polymer substrate and rigid overlay.
2. Discussion of Prior Art
Surface wrinkles have been used to effect, modify, or control various benefits/conditions, including surface adhesion, texturing, coefficients of friction, structural colors, metrology, and haptic alerts. Methods of producing surface wrinkles preexisting in the art include using a stretched substrate overlaid by a rigid (e.g., metal) film. Wrinkles are instantaneously or selectively produced in the film, upon the release of energy by the substrate, if the compressive strain in the film exceeds the critical bucking strain. As a result, these conventional methods produce generalized wrinkles that co-extend with the entire surface defined by the overlay. This method is in fact behind wrinkles commonly encountered, for example, on human skin and dehydrated apples. Of particular interest is that the wrinkle geometry is closely related to the material properties. Precisely controlled wrinkle structures have found many interesting applications including nano-metrology, stretchable electronics, biosensors, and manipulation of material topographic properties.
The present invention recites a novel assembly for and method of producing localized wrinkles within a surface, and more specifically, to an assembly for and method of producing localized surface wrinkles using a shape memory polymer substrate and rigid overlay. The present invention is useful for modifying the surface texture, and/or coefficient of friction of a select portion of a continuous surface. Where achieving a visible wavelength, the inventive wrinkling is also useful for producing structural colors in a predetermined pattern within the continuous surface; and as such, is further useful to produce a three-dimensional engaging surface (e.g., indicia, logo, shape, or picture) on a two-dimensional surface.
In a first aspect of the invention, a method of forming localized wrinkles upon a surface is presented. The method includes indenting a substrate at least partly formed of shape memory polymer presenting a glass transition temperature, so that the substrate defines a first area experiencing purely compressive strain and a second area adjacent the first area and experiencing both a vertical compressive strain and a lateral tensile strain. Next, a overlay is attached to the substrate, so as to overlay the first and second areas. The overlay defines the surface. The polymer is then activated, so as to recover the strains, and cause wrinkles to form in the overlay. Finally, the polymer is deactivated, so as to lock in the wrinkles.
A second aspect of the invention, includes a method of determining the cracking strain/stress of a nanoscopicallythin overlay, which includes observing the wrinkles in the above process, so as to determine a crack formation occurred for a given tensile strain.
Thus, in a third aspect, the invention presents an assembly for forming localized wrinkles within a continuous surface. The assembly includes a substrate at least partially formed of a shape memory polymer presenting a glass transition temperature and first elastic modulus when activated. The substrate is indented so as to define a first area experiencing a purely compressive strain, and a second area adjacent the first area and experiencing both a vertical compressive strain and a lateral tensile strain, when the polymer is deactivated. The substrate is operable to recover the strains when the polymer is activated. The assembly further includes a relaxed overlay fixedly attached to and configured to cover the first and second areas. The overlay defines the surface, a second elastic modulus, and a height, wherein the second elastic modulus is greater than the first modulus. The moduli, height, and strains are cooperatively configured to cause buckling in the overlay, when the polymer is activated and recovers the strains.
The disclosure may be understood more readily by reference to the following detailed description of the various features of the disclosure and the examples included therein.
A preferred embodiment(s) of the invention is described in detail below with reference to the attached drawing figures of exemplary scale, wherein:
a-d is a multi-elevation progression showing a method of forming localized wrinkles upon a surface, wherein a protruding press is used to indent the substrate, and the wrinkles are further shown in enlarged caption at
a-c is a multi-elevation progression showing a method of forming localized wrinkles upon a surface, wherein a recessed press is used to form a projection upon the substrate, in accordance with a preferred embodiment of the invention;
The following description of the preferred embodiments is merely exemplary in nature and is in no way intended to limit the invention, its application, or uses. As described and illustrated herein, a novel assembly 10 for and method of forming arbitrary localized wrinkles (i.e., wrinkle structures) 10a within a surface 12 includes and utilizes, respectively, a locally and plastically deformed shape memory polymer (SMP) based substrate 14 and a thin, high modulus overlay 16 (
As used herein, the term “shape memory polymer (SMP)” shall generally refer to a group of polymeric materials that demonstrate the ability to return to some previously defined shape when subjected to an appropriate thermal stimulus, as is known in the art. Shape memory polymers are capable of undergoing phase transitions in which their shape is altered as a function of temperature. The previously defined or permanent shape can be set by curing for thermoset polymers or melting or processing the polymer at a temperature higher than the highest thermal transition for thermoplastic polymers. For a thermoplastic shape memory polymer, a temporary shape can be set by heating the material to a temperature higher than Tg or Tm of the soft segment, but lower than the Tg or melting point of the hard segment. For a thermoset shape memory polymer, a temporary shape can be set by heating the material to a temperature higher than Tg or Tm. The temporary shape is set by cooling. The material can be reverted back to the permanent shape by heating the material above the shape memory transition temperature.
The temperature needed for permanent shape recovery can be set at any temperature between about −63° C. and about 120° C. or above. Engineering the composition and structure of the polymer itself can allow for the choice of a particular temperature for a desired application. A preferred temperature for shape recovery is greater than or equal to about −30° C., more preferably greater than or equal to about 0° C., and most preferably a temperature greater than or equal to about 50° C. Also, a preferred temperature for shape recovery is less than or equal to about 150° C., and most preferably less than or equal to about 150° C. and greater than or equal to about 80° C.
Suitable shape memory polymers include thermoplastics, thermosets, interpenetrating networks, semi-interpenetrating networks, or mixed networks. The polymers can be a single polymer or a blend of polymers. The polymers can be linear or branched thermoplastic elastomers with side chains or dendritic structural elements. Suitable polymer components to form a shape memory polymer include, but are not limited to, polyolefins, epoxy polymers, polyphosphazenes, poly(vinyl alcohols), polyamides, polyester amides, poly(amino acid)s, polyanhydrides, polycarbonates, polyacrylates, polyalkylenes, polyacrylamides, polyalkylene glycols, polyalkylene oxides, polyalkylene terephthalates, polyortho esters, polyvinyl ethers, polyvinyl esters, polyvinyl halides, polyesters, polylactides, polyglycolides, polysiloxanes, polyurethanes, polyethers, polyether amides, polyether esters, and copolymers thereof. Examples of suitable polyacrylates include poly(methyl methacrylate), poly(ethyl methacrylate), ply(butyl methacrylate), poly(isobutyl methacrylate), poly(hexyl methacrylate), poly(isodecyl methacrylate), poly(lauryl methacrylate), poly(phenyl methacrylate), poly(methyl acrylate), poly(isopropyl acrylate), poly(isobutyl acrylate) and poly(octadecyl acrylate). Examples of other suitable polymers include polystyrene, polypropylene, polyvinyl phenol, polyvinylpyrrolidone, chlorinated polybutylene, poly(octadecyl vinyl ether) ethylene vinyl acetate, polyethylene, poly(ethylene oxide)-poly(ethylene terephthalate), polyethylene/nylon (graft copolymer), polycaprolactones-polyamide (block copolymer), poly(caprolactone) dimethacrylate-n-butyl acrylate, poly(norbornyl-polyhedral oligomeric silsequioxane), polyvinylchloride, urethane/butadiene copolymers, polyurethane block copolymers, styrene-butadiene-styrene block copolymers, and the like.
In the present invention, pre-patterning on the substrate overlay 16 is produced to create wrinkle structures 10a (
More particularly, in an exemplary embodiment, the substrate 14 was at least partially formed of a solid epoxy shape memory polymer consisting, for example, of an aromatic diepoxide (EPON 826, 3.6 g or 0.01 mol), an aliphatic diepoxide (NGDE, 2.16 g or 0.01 mol), and an aliphatic diamine curing agent (Jeffamine D-230, 2.3 g or 0.01 mol). This mixture was cured at 100° C. for 1 hour and at 130° C. for 1 hour to obtain a shape memory polymer presenting a glass transition temperature of approximately 40° C., and a permanent default shape. The default shape preferably defines smooth exterior surfacing (i.e., curved or flat but having no indentations or protrusions). The substrate 14 may be rectangular (
To effect the inventive method, a press (e.g., indenter) 18 with a protruded (
In a first directly indented area 14a, only a compressive strain in the vertical direction is created (
Next, the relatively rigid overlay 16 is securely attached to the substrate 14, so as to cover the first and second areas 14a,b (
After film deposition is complete, and when the formation of wrinkles are desired, the assembly 10 is heated to activate the polymer substrate 14 and create wrinkles 10a due to shape recovery induced local compression (
If the lateral compression strain exceeds a critical buckling value defined by the assembly 10, wrinkles 10a will form. In a preferred embodiment, the critical buckling strain, εc, may be pre-determined according to the following formula:
εc=[9Es2/64Ef2]1/3 (1)
wherein Es is the modulus of the substrate, and Ef is the modulus of the film; and accordingly the resultant wrinkle amplitude, A, may be determined by the following formula:
A=h[(ε/εc)−1]1/2 (2)
wherein ε is the strain currently experienced by, and h is the thickness of the overlay 16. Thus, it is appreciated that for rigid substrates, i.e., large Es critical strain is large, amplitude is small, and wrinkles are difficult to form. Once the wrinkles 10a are formed, the substrate 14 is again cooled to a temperature below the transition temperature of the SMP, so as to lock in the wrinkles 10a, which makes them more robust than those conventionally produced by soft substrate assemblies.
It is appreciated that circularly distributed wrinkles (
In the exemplary embodiment, the wrinkles 10a were analyzed using an atomic force microsopy (AFM) due to the microscopic scales resulting therefrom. AFM characterization of wrinkles was conducted at room temperature in a contact mode using Dimension 3100 manufactured by Veeco™. The wavelength, a, and amplitude or height, A, of the wrinkles 10a were obtained by measuring 80-100 individual wrinkles using the section analysis function in the Nanoscope software (Nanoscope 5.31r1). One sample, presented a wavelength and amplitude of 800 nm of 80 nm, respectively.
It is appreciated that the wrinkle wavelength decreases linearly with strain, whereas wrinkle amplitude is independent of strain. Increasing the overlay thickness on the other hand, increases both wrinkle wavelength and amplitude. With respect to the impact of strain, the classical wrinkle theory based on elastic energy minimization suggests that wrinkle wavelength should be strain independent according to the following formula:
where E, v, h, and ε represent respectively modulus, Poisson ratio, film thickness, and compressive strain, and the subscripts s and f denotes substrate and film (i.e., overlay). Finally, it is appreciated that the linear dependence between wavelength and strain under the present invention provides a benefit in creating localized wrinkles 10a of different wavelength on the same surface, but deviates from the above relationship, when finite deformation is considered.
Where the wavelength falls within the visible spectrum, it is appreciated that a structural color will result. That is to say the wrinkles 10a will cause a color to be perceived by altering the way light travels at different dimensions, as opposed to chemical colors that rely on the absorption of certain wavelength lights by pigment molecules. It is appreciated that the colors are highly angle dependent; that is to say, the viewing angle contributes to the actual color perceived. It is further appreciated that this process presents advantages over conventional structural color forming techniques that require the use of lithographic templates, which can be relatively expensive and require dedicated equipment not widely accessible.
Through the creation of structural colors, arbitrary images can be captured and displayed using wrinkle based diffraction colors. For example, where the relief 18a presents a protruded logo or indicia, the letters can be made to appear to protrude out of the surface 12 (i.e., three-dimensionally), while in fact the surface 12 is macroscopically smooth. This illusion results because the edge of the letters is colored to resemble shading even though no pigment is introduced in the process. By using a recessed relief (
As shown in the circularly distributed wrinkles of
This invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments; it will be understood by those skilled in the art that various changes may be made and equivalents may be substituted for elements thereof without departing from the scope of the invention. In addition, many modifications may be made to adapt a particular situation or material to the teachings of the invention without departing from the essential scope thereof. Therefore, it is intended that the invention not be limited to a particular embodiment disclosed as the best mode contemplated for carrying out this invention, but that the invention will include all embodiments falling within the scope of the appended claims.