Explaining the spread in measurement of PDMS elastic properties: influence of test method and curing protocol
Hannah Varner, Tal Cohen

TL;DR
This study investigates how different test methods and curing protocols affect the reported elastic properties of PDMS, revealing significant biases and emphasizing the need for standardization in measurements of soft materials.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive analysis of how test method and curing protocol influence PDMS elastic property measurements, highlighting the importance of standardization.
Findings
Test method significantly biases reported properties.
Curing protocol also affects measured elastic moduli.
Standardization is essential for reliable soft material characterization.
Abstract
Accuracy in the measurement of mechanical properties is essential for precision engineering and for the interrogation of composition-property relationships. Conventional methods of mechanical testing, such as uniaxial tension, compression, and nanoindentation, provide highly repeatable and reliable results for stiff materials, for which they were originally developed. However, when applied to the characterization of soft and biological materials, the same cannot be said, and the spread of reported properties of similar materials is vast. Polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), commonly obtained from Dow as SYLGARD 184, is a ubiquitous such material, which has been integral to the rapid development of biocompatible microfluidic devices and flexible electronics in recent decades. However, reported shear moduli of this material range over 2 orders of magnitude for similar chemical compositions.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Surface Polishing Techniques
