Rethinking Ductility -- A Study Into the Size-Affected Fracture of Polymers
Zainab S. Patel, Abdulaziz O. Alrashed, Kush Dwivedi, Marco Salviato,, and Lucas R. Meza

TL;DR
This study investigates how size and degree of conversion affect fracture behavior in polymers, revealing a size-induced ductile-to-brittle transition linked to the fracture length scale.
Contribution
It establishes a mechanism explaining size-affected ductility in polymers, highlighting the role of fracture length scale and degree of conversion in failure behavior.
Findings
Higher degree of conversion increases strength and stiffness.
Fracture energy decreases significantly with higher degree of conversion.
Ductile-to-brittle transition occurs when fracture zone size approaches sample width.
Abstract
Ductility quantifies a material's capacity for plastic deformation, and it is a key property for preventing fracture driven failure in engineering parts. While some brittle materials exhibit improved ductility at small scales, the processes underlying this phenomenon are not well understood. This work establishes a mechanism for the origin of ductility via an investigation of size-affected fracture processes and polymer degree of conversion (DC) in two-photon lithography (TPL) fabricated materials. Microscale single edge notch bend (SENB) specimens were written with widths from 8 to 26 m and with different laser powers and post-write thermal annealing to control the DC between 17\% and 80\%. We find that shifting from low to high DC predictably causes a 3x and 4x increase in strength and bending stiffness, respectively, but that there is a corresponding 6x…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsIon-surface interactions and analysis · Integrated Circuits and Semiconductor Failure Analysis · Metal and Thin Film Mechanics
