Mode I Toughening Of Bio-based Epoxy Adhesive Through 3d-Printed Biomimetic Reinforcements

Abstract

Bio-based epoxy materials face major challenges in their relatively poor mechanical properties compared to their petroleum-based competitors, including low fracture toughness and abrupt failure. By mimicking the molecular structure of spider silk, which is one of the toughest materials in nature, we manufactured polymer overlapping curls consisting of coiling fibers with sacrificial bonds and hidden lengths through 3D printing. These curls were embedded in a bio-based epoxy aiming to improve its toughness. The bio-based epoxy adhesive layer integrated by such 3D-printed coiling fibers was tested under mode I opening load using Double Cantilever Beam tests. The results show an extrinsic bridging triggered by the embedded curls that promote progressive failure and improve the mode I fracture toughness by 285%. The proposed 3D-printed coiling fibers can improve the performance of biobased epoxies and retard crack growth, opening new horizons for their use in structural applications and the use of these bio-inspired overlapping curls to control crack growth in adhesively bonded joints.

Publication
Proceedings of the 21st European Conference on Composite Materials
Ran Tao
Ran Tao
Postdoc Researcher

My research interests in 3D printing and bio-inspired toughening designs.

Zhiyuan Xu
Zhiyuan Xu
PhD Candidate

My research interests in 3D printing and bio-inspired toughening designs.

Sofia Teixeira de Freitas
Sofia Teixeira de Freitas
Principal Investigator

Sofia Teixeira de Freitas researches the structural integrity of bonded and layered materials to enable durable, sustainable structures. She is also an accredited group facilitator, committed to building academic environments grounded in cooperation and inclusion—key to overcoming technological limits and addressing the challenges of a truly sustainable society.