Abstract:
Readily synthesizable nano-graphene and poly ethylene glycol based stable gels have been synthesized employing an easy refluxing method, and exhaustive rheological and viscoelastic characterizations have been performed to understand the nature of such complex gel systems. The gels exhibit
shear thinning response with pronounced yield stress values which is indicative of a microstructure,
where the graphene nanoflakes intercalate (possible due to the refluxing) with the polymer chains and
form a pseudo spring damper network. Experimentations on the thixotropic behavior of the gels indicate that the presence of the G nanoflakes leads to immensely augmented structural stability capable
of withstanding severe impact shears. Further information about the localized interactions of the G
nanoflakes with the polymer chains is revealed from the amplitude and frequency sweep analyses in
both linear and non-linear viscoelastic regimes. Massively enhanced cross over amplitude values are
recorded and several smart effects such as enhanced elastic behavior at increasing forcing frequencies
are registered. Structural resonance induced disruption of the elastic behavior is observed for the gels
for a given range of frequency and the proposition of resonance has been justified mathematically. It
is observed that, post this resonance bandwidth, the gels are able to self-heal and regain their original
elastic behavior back without any external intervention. More detailed information on the viscoelastic
nature of the gels has been obtained from creep and recovery compliance tests and justifications for
the spring damper microstructure has been obtained. Smart features such as enhanced stress relaxation behavior with increasing strain have been observed and the same explained, based on the proposed microstructure. The viscoelastic response of the gels has been mathematically modeled and it
has been revealed that such complex gels can be accommodated as modified Burger’s viscoelastic
systems with predominant elastic/plastic behavior. The present gels show promise in microscale
actuators, vibration isolation, and damping in devices and prosthetics, as active fluids in automotive
suspensions, controlled motion arrestors, and so on.