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Atomistic Materials Modeling of High-Pressure Hydrogen Interactions in Ethylene Propylene Diene Monomer (EPDM) Rubber

Wilson, Mark A.; Frischknecht, Amalie F.; Brownell, Matthew P.

Elastomeric rubbers serve a vital role as sealing materials in the hydrogen storage and transport infrastruc- ture. With applications including O-rings and hose-liners, these components are exposed to pressurized hydrogen at a range of temperatures, cycling rates, and pressure extremes. Cyclic (de)pressurization is known to degrade these materials through the process of cavitation. This readily visible failure mode occurs as a fracture or rupture of the material and is due to the oversaturated gas localizing to form gas bubbles. Computational modeling in the Hydrogen Materials Compatibility Program (H-Mat), co-led by Sandia National Laboratories and Pacific Northwest National Laboratory, employs multi-scale sim- ulation efforts to build a predictive understanding of hydrogen-induced damage in materials. Modeling efforts within the project aim to provide insight into how to formulate materials that are less sensitive to high-pressure hydrogen-induced failure. In this document, we summarize results from atomistic molec- ular dynamics simulations, which make predictive assessments of the effects of compositional variations in the commonly used elastomer, ethylene propylene diene monomer (EPDM).

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High-pressure hydrogen decompression in sulfur crosslinked elastomers

International Journal of Hydrogen Energy

Wilson, Mark A.; Frischknecht, Amalie F.

High-pressure storage and cyclic (de)pressurization of hydrogen gas is known to result in degradation and failure of gas canisters, hoses, linings, and O-rings as the relatively small hydrogen molecule can readily permeate most materials. Hence, identifying material compositions that are less susceptible to hydrogen-induced damage is of significant importance to the hydrogen energy infrastructure. Here, we use classical atomistic molecular dynamics simulations to study hydrogen exposed ethylene-propylene-diene monomer (EPDM) rubber, an elastomer typically used in O-rings. We make chemical modifications to the model by adjusting the crosslink density and report on gas solubility, diffusivity, and molecular restructuring in response to rapid decompression. Our simulations indicate that increases in crosslink density can reduce volumetric expansion during decompression and result in smaller free volume pore sizes. However, these favorable properties for sealing materials come with a tradeoff. At pressure, crosslinks introduce extra free volume, providing potential sites for gas localization, the precursor to cavitation-induced failure.

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Subdiffusive High-Pressure Hydrogen Gas Dynamics in Elastomers

Macromolecules

Brownell, Matthew P.; Frischknecht, Amalie F.; Wilson, Mark A.

Elastomeric rubber materials serve a vital role as sealing materials in the hydrogen storage and transport infrastructure. With applications including O-rings and hose liners, these components are exposed to pressurized hydrogen at a range of temperatures, cycling rates, and pressure extremes. High-pressure exposure and subsequent rapid decompression often lead to cavitation and stress-induced damage of the elastomer due to localization of the hydrogen gas. Here, we use all-atom classical molecular dynamics simulations to assess the impact of compositional variations on gas diffusion within the commonly used elastomer ethylene-propylene-diene monomer (EPDM). With the aim to build a predictive understanding of precursors to cavitation and to motivate material formulations that are less sensitive to hydrogen-induced failure, we perform systematic simulations of gas dynamics in EPDM as a function of temperature, gas concentration, and cross-link density. Our simulations reveal anomalous, subdiffusive hydrogen motion at pressure and intermediate times. We identify two groups of gas with different mobilities: one group exhibiting high mobility and one group exhibiting low mobility due to their motion being impeded by the polymer. With decreasing temperatures, the low-mobility group shows increased gas localization, the necessary precursor for cavitation damage in these materials. At lower temperatures, increasing cross-link density led to greater hydrogen gas mobility and a lower fraction of caged hydrogen, indicating that increasing cross-link density may reduce precursors to cavitation. Finally, we use a two-state kinetic model to determine the energetics associated with transitions between these two mobility states.

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Achieving high strength and ductility in traditionally brittle soft magnetic intermetallics via additive manufacturing

Acta Materialia

Babuska, Tomas F.; Wilson, Mark A.; Johnson, Kyle J.; Whetten, Shaun R.; Curry, John C.; Rodelas, Jeffrey R.; Atkinson, Cooper; Lu, Ping L.; Chandross, M.; Krick, Brandon A.; Michael, Joseph R.; Argibay, Nicolas A.; Susan, D.F.; Kustas, Andrew K.

Intermetallic alloys possess exceptional soft magnetic properties, including high permeability, low coercivity, and high saturation induction, but exhibit poor mechanical properties that make them impractical to bulk process and use at ideal compositions. We used laser-based Additive Manufacturing to process traditionally brittle Fe–Co and Fe–Si alloys in bulk form without macroscopic defects and at near-ideal compositions for electromagnetic applications. The binary Fe–50Co, as a model material, demonstrated simultaneous high strength (600–700 MPa) and high ductility (35%) in tension, corresponding to a ∼300% increase in strength and an order-of-magnitude improvement in ductility relative to conventionally processed material. Atomic-scale toughening and strengthening mechanisms, based on engineered multiscale microstructures, are proposed to explain the unusual combination of mechanical properties. This work presents an instance in which metal Additive Manufacturing processes are enabling, rather than limiting, the development of higher-performance alloys.

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Continuum stress intensity factors from atomistic fracture simulations

Computer Methods in Applied Mechanics and Engineering

Wilson, Mark A.; Grutzik, Scott J.; Chandross, M.

Stress intensity factors (SIFs) are used in continuum fracture mechanics to quantify the stress fields surrounding a crack in a homogeneous material in the linear elastic regime. Critical values of the SIFs define an intrinsic measure of the resistance of a material to propagate a crack. At atomic scales, however, fracture occurs as a series of atomic bonds breaking, differing from the continuum description. As a consequence, a formal analog of the continuum SIFs calculated from atomistic simulations can have spatially localized, microstructural contributions that originate from varying bond configurations. The ability to characterize fracture at the atomic scale in terms of the SIFs offers both an opportunity to probe the effects of chemistry, as well as how the addition of a microstructural component affects the accuracy. We present a novel numerical method to determine SIFs from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The accuracy of this approach is first examined for a simple model, and then applied to atomistic simulations of fracture in amorphous silica. MD simulations provide time and spatially dependent SIFs, with results that are shown to be in good agreement with experimental values for fracture toughness in silica glass.

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Changing the Engineering Design & Qualification Paradigm in Component Design & Manufacturing (Born Qualified)

Roach, R.A.; Bishop, Joseph E.; Jared, Bradley H.; Keicher, David M.; Cook, Adam W.; Whetten, Shaun R.; Forrest, Eric C.; Stanford, Joshua S.; Boyce, Brad B.; Johnson, Kyle J.; Rodgers, Theron R.; Ford, Kurtis R.; Martinez, Mario J.; Moser, Daniel M.; van Bloemen Waanders, Bart G.; Chandross, M.; Abdeljawad, Fadi F.; Allen, Kyle M.; Stender, Michael S.; Beghini, Lauren L.; Swiler, Laura P.; Lester, Brian T.; Argibay, Nicolas A.; Brown-Shaklee, Harlan J.; Kustas, Andrew K.; Sugar, Joshua D.; Kammler, Daniel K.; Wilson, Mark A.

Abstract not provided.

Hydrophilic domain structure in polymer exchange membranes: Simulations of NMR spin diffusion experiments to address ability for model discrimination

Journal of Polymer Science, Part B: Polymer Physics

Sorte, Eric G.; Abbott, Lauren J.; Frischknecht, Amalie F.; Wilson, Mark A.; Alam, Todd M.

We detail the development of a flexible simulation program (NMR_DIFFSIM) that solves the nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR) spin diffusion equation for arbitrary polymer architectures. The program was used to explore the proton (1H) NMR spin diffusion behavior predicted for a range of geometrical models describing polymer exchange membranes. These results were also directly compared with the NMR spin diffusion behavior predicted for more complex domain structures obtained from molecular dynamics (MD) simulations. The numerical implementation and capabilities of NMR_DIFFSIM were demonstrated by evaluating the experimental NMR spin diffusion behavior for the hydrophilic domain structure in sulfonated Diels-Alder Poly(Phenylene) (SDAPP) polymer membranes. The impact of morphology variations as a function of sulfonation and hydration level on the resulting NMR spin diffusion behavior were determined. These simulations allowed us to critically address the ability of NMR spin diffusion to discriminate between different structural models, and to highlight the extremely high fidelity experimental data required to accomplish this. A direct comparison of experimental double-quantum-filtered 1H NMR spin diffusion in SDAPP membranes to the spin diffusion behavior predicted for MD-proposed morphologies revealed excellent agreement, providing experimental support for the MD structures at low to moderate hydration levels. © 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 2018, 56, 62–78.

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Microstructural origins of nonlinear response in associating polymers under oscillatory shear

Polymers

Wilson, Mark A.; Baljon, Arlette R.C.

The response of associating polymers with oscillatory shear is studied through large-scale simulations. A hybrid molecular dynamics (MD), Monte Carlo (MC) algorithm is employed. Polymer chains are modeled as a coarse-grained bead-spring system. Functionalized end groups, at both ends of the polymer chains, can form reversible bonds according to MC rules. Stress-strain curves shownonlinearities indicated by a non-ellipsoidal shape. We consider two types of nonlinearities. Type I occurs at a strain amplitude much larger than one, type II at a frequency at which the elastic storage modulus dominates the viscous loss modulus. In this last case, the network topology resembles that of the system at rest. The reversible bonds are broken and chains stretch when the system moves away from the zero-strain position. For type I, the chains relax and the number of reversible bonds peaks when the system is near an extreme of the motion. During the movement to the other extreme of the cycle, first a stress overshoot occurs, then a yield accompanied by shear-banding. Finally, the network restructures. Interestingly, the system periodically restores bonds between the same associating groups. Even though major restructuring occurs, the system remembers previous network topologies.

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33 Results
33 Results