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research article

Tearing as a test for mechanical characterization of thin adhesive films

Hamm, Eugenio
•
Reis, Pedro M.  
•
LeBlanc, Michael
Show more
2008
Nature Materials

Thin adhesive films have become increasingly important in applications involving packaging, coating or for advertising. Once a film is adhered to a substrate, flaps can be detached by tearing and peeling, but they narrow and collapse in pointy shapes. Similar geometries are observed when peeling ultrathin films grown or deposited on a solid substrate, or skinning the natural protective cover of a ripe fruit. Here, we show that the detached flaps have perfect triangular shapes with a well-defined vertex angle; this is a signature of the conversion of bending energy into surface energy of fracture and adhesion. In particular, this triangular shape of the tear encodes the mechanical parameters related to these three forms of energy and could form the basis of a quantitative assay for the mechanical characterization of thin adhesive films, nanofilms deposited on substrates or fruit skin.

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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/nmat2161
Author(s)
Hamm, Eugenio
Reis, Pedro M.  
LeBlanc, Michael
Roman, Benoit
Cerda, Enrique
Date Issued

2008

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Nature Materials
Volume

7

Issue

5

Start page

386

End page

390

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

OTHER

EPFL units
FLEXLAB  
Available on Infoscience
January 18, 2018
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/144357
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