ISSN 1063-7850, Technical Physics Letters, 2019, Vol. 45, No. 5, pp. 453–456. © Pleiades Publishing, Ltd., 2019. Russian Text © The Author(s), 2019, published in Pis’ma v Zhurnal Tekhnicheskoi Fiziki, 2019, Vol. 45, No. 9, pp. 32–35. Thermomechanical Analysis of the Shape Memory Effect of a Polyurethane Composite Used to Create Deployable Space Structures T. A. Shalyginaa,b*, S. Yu. Voroninaa,b, A. Yu. Vlasova, K. A. Pasechnika,b, and I. V. Obvertkina,b a Reshetnev b Siberian State University of Science and Technology, Krasnoyarsk, 660037 Russia Federal Research Center “Krasnoyarsk Scientific Center,” Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Krasnoyarsk, 660036 Russia *e-mail: leonova.ta@inbox.ru Received January 28, 2019; revised February 12, 2019; accepted February 12, 2019 Abstract—The possible applicability of a three-point bending clamp of a thermomechanical analyzer to study the shape memory effect of a structural polyurethane composite is studied. The viscoelastic properties of the sample in the region of the transition from the glass to the highly elastic state are studied. The parameters affecting recovery rate Rr of the original shape and fixation rate Rf of the temporary shape are determined. Deformation and cooling conditions that allow one to achieve the values Rr = 99.98% and Rf = 99.70% are established for the polyurethane composite. DOI: 10.1134/S1063785019050171 Some problems of space technology involve the use of large special-purpose structures (antennas of modern satellite communications, sun-protection spatial structures, solar cell systems, etc.). The delivery of objects of such dimensions to near-earth orbit gives rise to many problems, the solution of which affects various fields of science. In this regard, new materials with a shape memory effect (SME) are being actively studied for the manufacture of transformable structures with the possibility of giving them a temporary compact shape on Earth and restoring their unfolded (original) shape in outer space [1]. The use of polymer materials (PMs) in this case is determined by the low cost and reduced weight of the structures, the suitable temperature range of implementation, and the low initiation temperature of the SME (about 100°C) [2]. Thermoplastic polyurethane with SME is a PM that possesses the above advantages and is used as a binder in the creation of polymer composite materials [3]. To simulate the process of deployment of transformable structures, one needs to study the physical principles of the algorithm for the free recovery of frozen deformation of the used material with SME. Therefore, this paper presents the results of studying the SME in a structural polyurethane composite (SPC) used for the manufacture of components (frames) of large-sized transformable reflectors of space antennas [4]. The aim of the work was to study the possible applicability of a three-point bending clamp in the mode of uniaxial controlled bending load of a thermomechanical analyzer (TMA) for studying the SME in SPC under conditions that are close to real operating conditions. In addition, special attention in this study was paid to determining the most appropriate deformation mode from the points of view of the effective fixation (packing) of the temporary shape and of the accuracy of restoration (deployment) of the original shape of SPC. An SPC sample composed of a Diaplex MP5510 polyurethane matrix (Japan) with a glass transition temperature of Tg = 55°C [5] and St 12073 carbon cloth (Russia) served as an object for studying. The sample was fabricated by contact molding at the Resource Center for Collective Use Spacecraft and Space Systems of the Reshetnev Siberian State University of Science and Technology. Thermomechanical (TM) studies of the viscoelastic properties of SPC with an SME were performed using a Q800 dynamic mechanical analyzer (DMA) manufactured by TA Instruments (United States). The complex Young’s modulus (E*) of the sample was measured using a three-point bending clamp in the mode of linear temperature scanning with heating from 0 to 100°C at a rate of 5°C/min. The frequency of dynamic loading of the composite was 1 Hz, and the relative deformation is no more than 0.1%. The SPC sample was a plate with a size of 30 × 12.5 × 0.65 mm. The Tg value was determined from the inflection point of the temperature dependence of the elastic modulus, E'(T), in the glass transition region, according to 453 454 SHALYGINA et al. shape when the sample is heated to a temperature above the glass transition temperature, Trec (recovery temperature) (Fig. 1). The studied SPC sample was considered as a TM device used in transformable space structures—therefore, control over σm was the most appropriate programming mode. When using a three-point bending clamp in TMA, the maximum value of the force applied to the SPC sample was 1.2 N (σm ≈ 15 MPa) at a maximum deformation value of εm ≈ 20%. To determine the most effective Tprog value from the point of view of shape recovery, we used the results of studying the TM cycle of the SME in a SPC at Tprog = 55, 65, and 80°C. At the same time, temperature Trec must be 20–30°C higher than Tprog; Tlow ≈ 23°C. The TM studies of the SME were carried out without exposure (tH = 0) of the sample to the preset σm stress and under curing for tH1 = 10 min at the end of Stage 1 in the highly elastic state and for tH2 = 10 min at the end of Stage 2 in the glass state for one TM cycle (tH12 = tH1 + tH2 = 20 min). Switching temperature TSW (switching temperature) at which a critical change in the sample shape occurs upon the free recovery of the frozen deformation was determined as the inflection point of the recovery curve (dependence ε(T)) upon heating from Tlow to Trec at Stage 4 of a TM analysis of the SME. Shape recovery rate Rr is a determining parameter of the SME, which shows the proportion of reversible deformations that occur as a result of mechanical action on the sample in its highly elastic state and expressed as follows: Tprog m Tlow Bending Cooling (1) (2) Cycle (3) Recovery Trec (4) Unloading Tlow Fig. 1. Schematic representation of a cyclic thermomechanical study of the shape memory effect in a structural polyurethane composite using a three-point bending clamp. GOST (State Standard) R 56753–2015 (ISO 6721-11: 2012). The TM cycle of the SME of SPC was studied using a three-point bending clamp of a TMAQ400EM thermomechanical analyzer manufactured by TA Instruments (United States). The measurements were performed in the mode of adjustable bending load and temperature varying according to a given program with simultaneous measurement of the longitudinal movement of the sample. The SPC sample was a bar with a size of 10 × 1.22 × 0.72 mm. The method of a cyclic TM study of the SME, which was described in 1992 in [6], entailed the presence of the following four stages: Stage 1, which included the heating of the sample to a temperature of Tprog (programming temperature), during which the sample was deformed; Step 2, which consisted in the creation of a frozen deformed state in the process of cooling to a temperature below the glass transition range, Tlow (low temperature), at a constant value of the σm stress (maintaining); Stage 3, in which the sample was completely unloaded; and Stage 4, which included the subsequent restoration of the original εm − ε p (1) × 100%, εm where εm is the total deformation value determined as a sum of the instantaneous (εl) and delayed (εc) highly elastic deformations (εm = εl + εc), while εp is the irreversible plastic deformation. Along with Rr, shape fixation rate Rf determining the proportion of fixed deformations, i.e., the ability of the material to “memorize” the temporary shape, is an important parameter of the SME: Rr = εu (2) × 100%, εm where εu is the deformation established as a result of instantaneous restoration of a certain part of the structural units after removing the εm load at Stage 3. The DMA curves of the E* value (Fig. 2) describe the viscoelastic behavior of an SPC sample in the temperature range from 0 to 105°C. Curve 1 clearly shows the region in the temperature range from 20 to 90°C, in which the dynamic elastic modulus, E', decreases from 26 to 2.7 GPa and indicates the transition of the binder of the composite from the glass to the highly elastic state. When using a loading freRf = TECHNICAL PHYSICS LETTERS Vol. 45 No. 5 2019 THERMOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF THE SHAPE MEMORY EFFECT 455 0.4 30 3 1 0.3 3 4 52.2 0.2 2 E'', GPa 20 tanδ −0.4 53.5 63.6 E', GPa ∂E'/∂T, GPa/°C −0.2 10 −0.6 0.1 1 2 52.0 0 20 40 60 80 0 100 T, °C Fig. 2. Thermomechanical curves of the temperature dependences of the (1) dynamic elastic modulus E', (2) mechanical loss modulus E", (3) partial temperature derivative ∂E'/∂T, and (4) mechanical loss tangent tanδ of a shape memory polyurethane composite. The numbers around the curves correspond to the temperature of the maxima and minima of the signals. quency of 1 Hz, the maximum of the tanδ peak shifts to the high-temperature region by 5–15°C [7]. Therefore, we determined the Tg values for SPC samples as the inflection points on the E'(T) curve, which are close to the maximum peak of the E"(T) curve and the minimum on the ∂E'/∂T(T) curve [8]. The initial SPC sample had a glass transition temperature of Tg = 52.2°C, which is 3°C lower than the glass transition temperature of the unreinforced polyurethane matrix. Starting from the 13th minute (t = 13 min), a delayed highly elastic deformation (εc) can be observed on the ε(t) TM curve, which describes the relaxation nature of the PM deformation (Figs. 3a, 3b). During cooling, molecular chains that are still in the highly elastic state experience chaotic collisions under thermal motion, which give rise to changes in the conformational states with a simultaneous decrease in the εu value, which leads, in turn, to a decrease in the Rf value. Exposure of the sample to a constant σm stress in the glass state leads to a decrease in the proportion of instantaneous reversible deformation that occurs after the sample is unloaded, while the Rf value increases. Therefore, aging of the sample at the end of Stage 1 is not an effective tool for improving the fixation of the temporary shape. The ε(T) TMA curves show that the TSW value barely depends on the σm and tH values, but strongly depends on the Tprog value (Figs. 3c, 3d). Increases in the Tprog value by 10 and 25°C leads to shifts in the TSW value toward the high-temperature region by 5 and 9°C, respectively. An increase in the Tprog value also leads to an expansion of the temperature range of the frozen deformation recovery by 15–20°C on average. The εm, εp, and εu parameter values required for the calculation of Rf and Rr (see Table 1) were determined using the TMA data (Fig. 3). The maximum value, TECHNICAL PHYSICS LETTERS Vol. 45 No. 5 2019 Rr = 99.98%, was obtained at a temperature of Tprog = 65°C and tH = 0 min, and the maximum value, Rf = 99.70%, was obtained at Tprog = 55°C and tH12 = 20 min. An increase in the Tprog temperature to 80°C leads to decreases in the Rf and Rr values to 93.90 and 94.60%, respectively. The shape recovery effect deteriorates because of a substantial displacement of the PM molecular segments during deformation. This occurs as a result of weakening of the intermolecular bonds, which fixed the molecular segments in a certain spatial position before. Thus, if the sample is rapidly cooled after deformation, thereby decreasing the proportion of highly elastic deformation, then it is possible to prevent a substantial rearrangement of the structural units and, thereby, to increase the Rr value. At the same time, if we maintain the material at a constant σm value in the glass state, then the quality of fixation (packing) of the sample can be improved by leaving the Rr value (deployment) at a high level. Table 1. Experimentally obtained values of the shape memory effect parameters for structural polyurethane composite Tg, °C 52.2 ± 1 E', GPa Tprog, °C TSW, °C 26 55 ± 1 65 ± 1 80 ± 1 55 ± 1 65 ± 1 80 ± 1 Rr, % tH = 0 min 57.3 98 62.4 99.9 66.5 99.8 tH12 = 20 min 57.3 96 (96.8)* 62.2 96.9 (97.2)* 66.4 94.6 (97.5)* Rf, % 95.4 97.8 93.9 99.7 99.3 99.1 * The values obtained in the case in which temperature Trec is 45°C higher than temperature Tprog. SHALYGINA et al. 60 (3) εu Trec 100 Tprog 8 Tlow 0 10 20 60 25 20 Time, min 3 2 30 20 35 0 (c) Displacement: 1—(–2.5%) 2—(–2.0%) 10 20 30 40 Time, min 3 16 8 TSW 2 12 1 50 10 20 60 (d) Displacement: 1—(–4.0%) 2—(–1.5%) 8 4 TSW 0 0 20 εp(4) Tlow 20 12 1 4 4 Strain, % Strain, % 16 15 εp(4) [ 4 5 15 ] Stress, MPa 10 σm [ Tprog 8 15 εc 16 (1) εl 12 (b) 140 (2)εm ] T, °C 100 Strain, % Trec (3)εu ] Stress, MPa (2)εm σm 20 ] T, °C εc 16 (1) εl 12 (a) 140 [ Strain, % 20 [ 456 40 60 T, °C 80 100 20 40 60 T, °C 80 100 Fig. 3. Thermomechanical curves of the deformation, temperature, and stress as functions of time for a shape memory polyurethane composite deformed at Tprog = 80°С and (a) tH = 0 and (b) tH12 = 20 min; the temperature dependences of the deformation at (c) tH = 0 and (d) tH12 = 20 min for Tprog values of (1) 55, (2) 65, and (3) 80°C. This study shows the possibility of using a threepoint bending clamp for a thermomechanical analysis of the shape memory effect of a structural polyurethane composite used in the production of deployable space structures. It is established that the maximum Rr value (99.98%) for the SPC sample was obtained under controlled bending load (F = 1.2 N) at Tprog = 65°C and tH = 0 min. It is shown that a 10-min exposure of the polyurethane composite sample in the glass state to a constant load can increase the Rf value to 99.70%. It is revealed that increases in deformation temperature Tprog by 10 and 25°C give rise to shifts in temperature of the critical change of the sample shape TSW toward the high-temperature region by 5 and 9°C, respectively, and to the free recovery of the frozen deformation. FUNDING This work was supported by the Ministry of Education and Science of the Russian Federation under contract no. 02.G25.31.0147. REFERENCES 1. D. T. Dao, N. S. Ha, N. S. Goo, and W.-R. Yu, J. Intell. Mater. Syst. Struct. 29, 1560 (2017). https://doi.org/10.1177/1045389X17742728 2. M. D. Hager, S. Bodea, C. Weber, and U. S. Schubert, Prog. Polym. Sci. 49–50, 3 (2015). https://doi.org/10.1016/j.progpolymsci.2015.04.002 3. W. M. Huang, B. Yang, Y. Zhao, and Z. Ding, J. Mater. Chem. 20, 3367 (2010). https://doi.org/10.1039/B922943D 4. M. A. Titov, A. Yu. Vlasov, K. A. Pasechnik, R. F. Masalimov, and I. V. Obvertkin, RF Patent No. 179275, Byull. Izobret., No. 13 (2018). 5. Applications Table. 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