Issue 1, 2023

Effect of connectivity on the elasticity of athermal network materials

Abstract

Network materials with stochastic structure are ubiquitous in biology and engineering, which drives the current interest in establishing relations between their structure and mechanical behavior. In this work we focus on the effect of connectivity defined by the number of fibers emerging from a crosslink, z, and compare networks with identical (z-homogeneous) and distinct (z-heterogeneous) z at the crosslinks. We observe that the functional form of strain stiffening is z-independent, and that the central z-dependent parameter is the small strain stiffness, E0. We confirm previous results indicating that the functional form of E0(z) is a power function with 3 regimes and observe that this applies to a broad range of z. However, the scaling exponents are different in the z-homogeneous and z-heterogeneous cases. We confirm that increasing z across the Maxwell's central force isostatic point leads to a transition from bending to axial energy storage. However, we observe that this does not necessarily imply that deformation becomes affine in the large z limit. In fact, networks of fibers with low bending stiffness retain a relaxation mode based on the rotational degree of freedom of the crosslinks which allows E0 in the large z limit to be smaller than the affine model prediction. We also conclude that in the z-heterogeneous case, the mean connectivity [z with combining macron] is sufficient to evaluate the effect of connectivity on E0 and that higher moments of the distribution of z are less important.

Graphical abstract: Effect of connectivity on the elasticity of athermal network materials

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Sep 2022
Accepted
28 Nov 2022
First published
29 Nov 2022

Soft Matter, 2023,19, 106-114

Author version available

Effect of connectivity on the elasticity of athermal network materials

N. Parvez and C. R. Picu, Soft Matter, 2023, 19, 106 DOI: 10.1039/D2SM01303G

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