Abstract

Crystallinity distribution of natural rubber around filled micrometer-size glass beads under different strains are studied with in-situ micro-focused scanning X-ray diffraction (μ-SXRD), where the glass beads are taken to serve as a model of filler. The experimental results suggest, due to the gradient stress field around the glass bead, the oscillatory distribution of crystallinities around the glass bead tends to form soft-hard double network with multi-scale hierarchical structures and spontaneously responds to external strains. The double network spreads stress in larger region and avoids stress concentration, in which the hard domains with high crystallinities effectively sustain the external stress while the soft domains with low crystallinity store elastic energy. According to the equal strain and equal stress conditions, the quantitative calculation on enhancement factor indicates that the soft-hard double network structure can increase the fracture energy to about three orders of magnitude as comparing to that of structure with homogeneous distribution of crystallinity.

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