Shu Zhuab,
Tianwen Yanab,
Xinlin Huangab,
Elwathig A. M. Hassanabd,
Jianfeng Zhou*ab,
Sen Zhangac,
Mengyun Xiongab,
Muhuo Yuab and
Zhaomin Lie
aState Key Laboratory for Modification of Chemical Fibers and Polymer Materials, Shanghai Collaborative Innovation Center of High-Performance Fibers and Composites (Province-Ministry Joint), Key Laboratory of High-Performance Fibers & Products, Ministry of Education, Center for Civil Aviation Composites, Donghua University, Shanghai, 201620, P. R. China. E-mail: zjf@dhu.edu.cn
bKey Laboratory of Shanghai City for Lightweight Composites, College of Materials Science and Engineering, Donghua University, Shanghai, 201620, P. R. China
cLiaoning Engineering Technology Research Center of Function Fiber and Its Composites, Dalian Polytechnic University, Dalian 116034, China
dIndustries Engineering and Technology, University of Gezira, Sudan
eShanghai Microport Medical (Group) Co. Ltd, Shanghai 201203, China
First published on 23rd May 2022
A bioinspired PEEK material with hard “bricks” of nanoscale lamellae and micron-scale deformed spherulites bonded by soft “mortar” of a rigid amorphous fraction was produced with a pressure-induced flow (PIF) processing applied in the solid-state. Novel mechanisms were proposed for the marked and simultaneous improvement in the strength and toughness, where the tensile strength and impact strength could be increased to ∼200% and ∼450%, respectively. On one hand, the rotation, recombination and restacking of the crystalline blocks formed an oriented and stratified morphology similar to the “brick-and-mortar” structure in nacre, and resulted in the confined crack propagations and the tortuous energy dissipating paths. On the other hand, the PIF-relaxation due to the newly generated rigid amorphous fraction further contributed to the improvement of the impact strength. The efficiency of enhancement could be controlled by the molding temperature, the compression ratio, and the volume fraction of chopped carbon fiber. As a result, PIF-processing might endow the PEEK material with improved mechanical matching with the surrounding tissues and extended service life in biomedical applications while retaining excellent biocompatibility with no external substances introduced.
However, merely adjusting the type and concentration of fiber is not able to solve all the problems while designing those implants. There are two paradoxical relations that must be carefully dealt with: (1) the trade-off between mechanical performance and biological compatibility.12,13 Many load-bearing implants require materials with a strength comparable to that of metals, which demands a large volume fraction of fiber reinforcement; however, the presence of these fibers at the surface may adversely affect biocompatibility. (2) The conflict lies between the strength and the toughness (durability).14 Unfilled PEEK offers ductility, good impact resistance and isotropic properties but often lacks sufficient stiffness and strength, while reinforced PEEK grades are typically the opposite – very strong and stiff materials but comparatively brittle.15,16
Nacre makes a perfect example material in nature that shows ultra-high strength and toughness at the same time.17–19 Natural seashell nacre consists of approximately 95% aragonite (a mineral form of CaCO3) and a few percent of biological macromolecules; yet its impact strength is 3000 folds of its mineral constituency.20 The superior strength and toughness of seashell nacre are attributed to the robust nanostructure in which the protein collagen layers (10–50 nm thick) and aragonite platelets (200–900 nm thick) form an ordered “brick-and-mortar” structure, where the brick (platelet) interlocks allow a large amount of fracture energy to dissipate in the mortar (protein) via shear deformation.17,21 Some ultra-tough and ultra-strong nacre-inspired materials have been made through strict methods, such as layer-by-layer, self-assembly, and freeze-casting.22–27 However, generating microscopically stratified structures mainly containing lightweight materials such as polymers, which at the same time are uniformly aligned on a large length scale (e.g., in bulk material), has turned out to be difficult.28,29
In this study, we prepared a nacre-like PEEK material with superior tensile strength and toughness through a method of pressure-induced flow (PIF) that we developed,30 and proposed more comprehensive mechanisms for the simultaneous strengthening and toughening. We revealed that during PIF-processing performed at processing temperatures below the melting point, the hard domains (crystalline lamellae) retained their integrity but were aligned in the flow field to form an oriented and stratified morphology among the soft domains of the amorphous region to simultaneously boost the toughness and strength. The validity and efficiency for enhancing PEEK samples were confirmed by characterizations on the mechanical performances, crystallization and orientation behaviors, and fracture surface morphologies with different techniques, such as tensile stress–strain curves, differential scanning calorimetry, two-dimensional X-ray diffraction, and scanning electron microscopy. With a unique combination of high stiffness and excellent ductility, the PIF-processed PEEK bridges the performance gap between unfilled PEEK and traditional CFR PEEK grades, and the method provided in this work can also be used in guiding the design of other structural materials.
In order to quantitatively characterize the size changes of PEEK samples, we defined the ratio of respective thicknesses before and after PIF-processing as the compression ratio, expressed by R:
R = d1/d2 | (1) |
σ = P/(b × d) | (2) |
Fig. 2 (A) Tensile strength and fracture toughness of PEEK samples with different compression ratios. (B) Stress–strain curves of PEEK samples with different compression ratios at 280 °C. |
Fig. 2B presents the stress–strain curves for tensile tests. Both the tensile strength and elongation at break of PEEK after PIF-processing were much higher than those of non-PIF samples. Interestingly, for all PIF-processed samples, an inflection occurred near the inherent yield stress of the corresponding non-PIF sample, while no real yield behavior occurred at this point, and a “second yield” point occurred at a tensile stress much higher than the original yielding strength (except for the sample with the highest compression ratio of 2.6). It is right the “second yield” that causes a much higher elongation at break and therefore higher yield strength and tensile strength, which is distinct from the conventional style of strengthening by improving the moduli.
Beyond the traditional yield point, the tensile stress for the non-PIF sample rapidly decreased until the complete disentanglement and mutual slippage of molecular chains took place in certain places of the continuous phase of amorphous components, leading to breakage of the material. However, for the PIF-processed samples, only a decrease in slope could be observed in the stress–strain curve at the “first yield point”, and the material retained a certain percentage of stiffness and moduli until the tensile stress and strain increased to the “second yield” point and caused a break. These phenomena could be signals of internal changes in microstructures, e.g., the emergence of new phase structures or new routes of deformation and slippage along phase boundaries.
It is noteworthy that the results of the PEEK system are different from the situations in many other semi-crystalline polymers, such as polypropylene, polylactic acid and polyamide, where in all curves for PIF-processed samples, an inflection occurred right at the yield point of a non-PIF sample (with the same stress and strain).30,31,33 For PEEK samples with smaller compression ratios of 1.4 and 1.6, the initial slopes of the stress–strain curves were lower than those of the samples without PIF-processing, indicating smaller Young's moduli. We speculate that the spherulites in the PEEK system are more readily deformed under compression, as occurs in shear yielding.34,35 Interestingly, there is similarity in the situation of the polyphenylene sulfide (PPS) system, where the modification of PIF-processing might provide a negative impact on tensile strength and impact strength under certain temperatures and pressures.36
The microstructural changes could be revealed by SEM observations on the fracture surfaces of samples after impact and tensile tests, where the fractural morphologies clearly presented the changes due to PIF-processing, as shown in Fig. 3. Compared to the disorderly fracture surfaces indicating brittle fracture for non-PIF samples, the samples with PIF-processing exhibited clearly oriented and stratified morphologies of overlapped layers similar to nacre (see Fig. 3E and F),24 regardless of the loading pressure.
However, a closer look at the images showed a difference between the fracture surfaces after tensile and impact tests. As revealed by the morphologies of impact fracture surfaces (Fig. 3D), the spherulites deformed and aligned in the pressure-induced flow direction to form parallel layers no thicker than 5 μm and show a nice orientation of cracks perpendicular to LD. Meanwhile, protrusions and grooves due to the pull-out of spherulites from opposite surfaces were clearly observed along FD. We speculate that the zigzag arrangement of deformed spherulites contributed to the tortuous energy dissipating paths and resulted in improved toughness (similar to what happens in nacre, Fig. 3G), while the alignment and stretching of the amorphous regions between lamellae and spherulites are responsible for the large elongation at break. Interestingly, much narrower microsheets could be seen under high magnification within the deformed spherulites, with smaller holes and fibrous protrusions between them. The tensile fracture surface morphologies observed by SEM (Fig. 3B) demonstrate the alignment and orientation of parallel microsheets that are much thinner than deformed spherulites, with obscure boundaries between them. Also, holes and fibrous protrusion could be seen under high magnification, indicating a fracture mode closer to plastic deformation and ductile fracture. Upon impacting or stretching, the slippage and pull-out between those closely packed crystalline plates result in the further improvement of both the impact and tensile strength of the samples. This coincides with the research that at large deformations in uniaxial tension, PEEK undergoes molecular alignment and localization of a neck, which complicates characterization of its true-stress strain behavior up to failure.37 The cartoons above the images show the specific locations of the characterized fracture surfaces for each sample, where the right edge of each cartoon represents the fracture surface after tensile or impact tests. It was found that non-PIF samples basically exhibit a brittle fracture, while the PIF-processed samples show a clear ductile fracture with the fracture faces somewhat propagating along FD. Hence, the fracture surfaces parallel to the upper surface of the samples and those parallel to the front surface of the samples could be picked out in Fig. 3B and D, respectively. The brittle ductile transition here, as a result of the protrusions and holes of different length scale, further confirmed the influence of PIF-processing on improving the toughness.
An unresolved problem remains is how the spherulites and lamellae could evolve into nacre-like microsheets by affine deformation or fragmentation and rearrangement of the lamellae. Crystal orientation was analysed with the aid of two-dimensional X-ray diffraction (2D-XRD), as illustrated in Fig. 4. As previously reported, polymers show better mechanical properties along the orientation direction.38,39 The non-PIF PEEK sample (R = 1.0) showed homogeneous diffraction rings (Fig. 4A and B), indicating a random orientation of crystals and an isotropic microstructure. As the compression ratio increases, the diffraction rings gradually degenerate into equatorial arcs, indicating that the crystalline blocks within fibrils have a molecular orientation parallel to the crystalline-amorphous alternating direction, i.e., along FD, indicating a rotation of molecular orientation from along LD to along FD. To further demonstrate the change in orientation, the XRD image is integrated to obtain the azimuth curve, as shown in Fig. 4C. The azimuth curve obtained from the PEEK sample (R = 1.0), without PIF molding, has no obvious peak. However, when the sample deforms under a certain pressure, an obvious peak appears in the azimuth curve, and the peak on the curve gradually becomes sharp, indicating that the degree of orientation increases. The orientation degree can be calculated according to the Hermann orientation parameter as
f = (3cos2Φ − 1)/2 | (3) |
Fig. 4 2D-XRD patterns of PEEK samples: (A) CD direction; (B) LD direction. SAXS analytic curve of PEEK samples: (C) direction angle integral; (D) orientation factor. |
DSC measurements were also performed to trace any possible structural changes in the lamellae (Fig. 5). It can be concluded from the minor changes in melting point, crystallinity and the shape of melting peak that there are no obvious structural changes in the basic units for lamellae, in accordance with the above statements that the rotation, recombination and restacking of the crystalline blocks dominate the rearrangement of lamellae.
Fig. 5 (A) DSC heating curves of PEEK samples with different compression ratios; (B) crystallinity and melting temperature of PEEK samples with different compression ratios. |
Although the nacre-like stratified structure has been clearly interpreted at this stage, the strange “second yield” and large elongation at break remain to be resolved. Changes in mechanical properties, especially those related to structural evolution in amorphous regions, can be monitored using dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) over a range of ratios and mold temperatures. Fig. 6 presents the DMA curves of PEEK samples under different compression ratios and different molding temperatures. For Fig. 6A, the molding temperature was kept at 280 °C to evaluate the effect of different compression ratios. For Fig. 6B, the molding pressure is adjusted so that the compression ratio of all samples is approximately 1.7 to ensure the flow deformation of PEEK samples but maintain a consistent crystal orientation. As shown in Fig. 6A, the non-PIF processed exhibits only an α relaxation (glass transition) at approximately 170 °C, while the samples with PIF-processing show an additional relaxation (hereafter referred to as the PIF-relaxation) at approximately 280 °C, which is very close to the molding temperature. At the same time, the peak temperature of α relaxation (the glass transition temperature, Tg) moves to the right as the compression ratio increases. As shown in Fig. 6B, Tg remains almost constant at about 180 °C, providing a specific molding pressure, while the peak temperature of the PIF-relaxation continuously increases with the molding temperature, as further demonstrated in Fig. 6C. It is easy to conclude that for a semi-crystalline polymer with a medium degree of crystallinity, such as PEEK, the rise in Tg with the PIF-process depends mainly on the compression ratio, while the rise in peak temperature of PIF-relaxation largely relies on the molding temperature.
No transformation similar to PIF relaxation has been reported in pure PEEK systems until now, but in research on polypropylene (PP), a large number of results have shown that crystallized PP may exhibit additional relaxation at temperatures between Tg and Tm (80–140 °C).40 Researchers acknowledge that the addition relaxation of PP originates from the molecular movement in the crystalline zone, whereas the peak temperature and amplitude of the addition relaxation are closely related to the molecular weight, crystallinity, crystalline morphology, stereo regularity, heat treatment conditions and the existence of a swelling agent of organic small molecules. We ascribe the PIF-relaxation to the rigid amorphous fraction (RAF) around crystal lamellae,41 which includes the tie molecules involved in the interspace between lamellae,42 the chain loops embedded between two lamellae of spherulites,43 the chain heads or chain tails detached from the lamella fibrils,44 and so on. Most of these amorphous components are located in or attached to crystalline regions, and their motions are highly constrained, partly due to the spatial confinement or stretching by the crystalline phase and partly because of the inner strain within the amorphous phase itself. As a result, the relaxation of RAF is shifted to temperatures higher than Tg, and the magnitude of the temperature shift is related to the extent of confinement. The peak temperature substantially increases with increasing molding temperature, indicating that the higher mobility of molecular chains favors the conversion of lamella-adjacent amorphous components into RAF via the relative slippery and transverse alignment of crystal lamellae. This well accounts for the “second relaxation” in tensile curves, which appears at larger stresses. We speculate that some changes in microstructures of the materials after PIF-processing hindered the strain softening after the first yielding transition, and the orientation-induced increase in RAF, as a toughened “mortar”, further boosted the improvement of the impact strength.
Regarding the α relaxation, the rise in Tg with increasing temperature and compression ratio indicates that PIF-processing also brings a confinement in normal amorphous regions. Since the temperature shift depends mainly on the compression ratio and not the molding temperature, we speculate that the reduced free volume due to flow-induced orientation and the compact stacking of molecular segments are the underlying reason. Given the limited extent of confinement in molecular mobility, an broadened area of the loss peak and a slight rise in Tg take place, instead of the large shift in peak temperature observed in PIF-relaxation. Obviously, the PIF-relaxation must be associated with certain rearrangements between chain segments, which highly rely on molecular mobility at different temperatures and produce a new phase more rigid than the amorphous region.
We speculate that the much enhanced mechanical properties might be attributed to the slippery and transverse alignment of crystal lamellae, the resultant confinement of crack propagations and the tortuous energy dissipating paths, as well as the newly formed RAF. The PIF field first leads to an elongation of the spherulites which then fragment into regions of oriented lamellae. Facilitated by the flow of the softer matrix (amorphous phase), the hard segments can slip upon each other and are finally rearranged into an ordered system containing a random and overlapping alignment of lamellae. Upon an impacting or stretching force, the delamination, the slippage and pull-out between the lamellae stacks, the plastic deformation of RAF at the interface, as well as the greatly increased sum distance of energy-dissipating paths, resulting in improvement of both impact and tensile strength of the PIF-processed samples.
It is worth noting that the tensile strength and impact strength of PIF-processed PEEK could even overtake 30% (w/w) chopped carbon fiber reinforced (CCFR) PEEK composite,9 which has been widely used as load-bearing implants. The only hindrance lies in the Young's moduli, which are no more than that of unfilled PEEK. A combination of PIF-processing and incorporation of chopped carbon fiber seems to be able to produce a material with even better overall performance. Although the effect of PIF-processing on PEEK composites is beyond the scope of the present research, our previous investigation on CF/PPS composites confirmed that the Young's modulus could surpass the value of non-PIF samples.36 Considering that in reality, CCFR PEEK requires additional reinforcement to achieve sufficient strength to replace conventional metallic materials,3 we believe that PIF-processing can endow the PEEK material with improved mechanical matching with the surrounding tissues and extended service life in biomedical applications. Inspired by the PIF boosted strength and toughness, one can even reduce the volume fraction of chopped carbon fiber to obtain a balance between processability and performance.
There are still other issues to be clarified. First, PIF-processed samples should retain most of the excellent characteristics of PEEK material, including the excellent biocompatibility, because no external substances are introduced into the system. Second, the RAF and resultant nacre-like structures could be “melted” at temperatures higher than the PIF-processing temperature but well hold the integrity at room temperature. Third, the markedly increased impact strength and elongation at break benefit the use of PEEK in fields such as saccule expanding tubes and seals, especially when the ductility is emphasized. In summary, PIF-processed PEEK materials are promising candidates for broadened biomedical applications, such as various implants.
The mechanisms for the enhanced mechanical properties were proposed. The slippery and transverse alignment of crystal lamellae form an oriented and stratified nacre-like morphology that confines the resultant crack propagations as well as tortuous energy dissipating paths. The PIF field first leads to elongation of the spherulites, followed by fragmentation into regions of oriented lamellae. Facilitated by the flow of the softer matrix (amorphous phase), the hard segments can slip upon each other and are finally rearranged into an ordered system containing a random and overlapping alignment of lamellae. Upon an impacting or stretching force, the delamination, slippage and pull-out between the lamellae stacks, plastic deformation of RAF at the interface, and greatly increased sum distance of energy-dissipating paths resulted in improvement of both the impact and tensile strength of the PIF-processed samples.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Table S1: compression ratio of samples during PIF-processing as functions of temperature and pressure. Fig. S1: SEM images of fractured surfaces after impact tests for PEEK samples: (a) and (b) without PIF-processing; (c) and (d) after PIF-processing. See https://doi.org/10.1039/d2ra00667g |
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