
Constrained Amorphous Interphase in Poly(l -lactic acid): Estimation of the Tensile Elastic Modulus
Author(s) -
Laura Aliotta,
Massimo Gazzano,
Andrea Lazzeri,
Maria Cristina Righetti
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs omega
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.779
H-Index - 40
ISSN - 2470-1343
DOI - 10.1021/acsomega.0c02330
Subject(s) - crystallinity , amorphous solid , materials science , elastic modulus , interphase , composite material , phase (matter) , ultimate tensile strength , crystal (programming language) , young's modulus , modulus , crystallography , chemistry , organic chemistry , biology , computer science , programming language , genetics
The mechanical properties of semicrystalline PLLA containing exclusively α'- or α-crystals have been investigated. The connection between experimental elastic moduli and phase composition has been analyzed as a function of the polymorphic crystalline form. For a complete interpretation of the mechanical properties, the contribution of the crystalline regions and the constrained amorphous interphase or rigid amorphous fraction (RAF) has been quantified by a three-phase mechanical model. The mathematical approach allowed the simultaneous quantification of the elastic moduli of (i) the α'- and α-phases (11.2 and 14.8 GPa, respectively, in excellent agreement with experimental and theoretical data reported in the literature) and (ii) the rigid amorphous fractions linked to the α'- and α-forms (5.4 and 6.1 GPa, respectively). In parallel, the densities of the RAF connected with α'- and α-crystals have been measured (1.17 and 1.11 g/cm 3 , respectively). The slightly higher value of the elastic modulus of the RAF connected to the α-crystals and its lower density have been associated to a stronger chain coupling at the amorphous/crystal interface. Thus, the elastic moduli at T room of the crystalline ( E C ), mobile amorphous ( E MAF ), and rigid amorphous ( E RAF ) fractions of PLLA turned out to be quantitatively in the order of E MAF < E RAF < E C , with the experimental E MAF value equal to 3.6 GPa. These findings can allow a better tailoring of the properties of PLLA materials in relation to specific applications.