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Bridging nanoparticle morphology and viscoelastic behavior in epoxy nanocomposites: A coarse-grained simulation-informed constitutive model

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arXiv:2606.09279v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Accurate prediction of the material behavior of polymer nanocomposites under various thermomechanical loading conditions is increasingly demanded for engineering applications. This study proposes an integrated framework combining coarse-grained (CG) molecular simulations and experimental testing to develop predictive constitutive models for nanoparticle/epoxy nanocomposites. The key contribution of this work lies in characterizing the influence...

arXiv:2606.09279v1 Announce Type: new Abstract: Accurate prediction of the material behavior of polymer nanocomposites under various thermomechanical loading conditions is increasingly demanded for engineering applications. This study proposes an integrated framework combining coarse-grained (CG) molecular simulations and experimental testing to develop predictive constitutive models for nanoparticle/epoxy nanocomposites. The key contribution of this work lies in characterizing the influence of nanoparticle content and agglomerate size on the rate- and temperature-dependent behavior of nanocomposites, enabled by large-scale CG simulations. The proposed framework successfully captures the material response, including nonlinear hyperelasticity, softening behavior, and rate- and temperature-dependent properties, across a broad range of strain rates, temperatures, and nanoparticle sizes and weight fractions. The predictive capability of the CG simulation-informed constitutive model is validated using additional experimental data that were not included in the parameter identification process. By reducing reliance on extensive experimental testing while maintaining high accuracy, this simulation-driven approach offers an efficient pathway for developing robust, predictive constitutive models for designing and optimizing advanced nanocomposites.
Originally published by arXiv CS Read original →