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Main Authors: Dai, Oliver, Terentjev, Andrew, Terentjev, Eugene M.
Format: Preprint
Published: 2026
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.18228
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author Dai, Oliver
Terentjev, Andrew
Terentjev, Eugene M.
author_facet Dai, Oliver
Terentjev, Andrew
Terentjev, Eugene M.
contents We investigate how controlled foaming alters the mechanical dissipation of liquid crystalline elastomers (LCEs). Using thermal expandable microspheres, we generate homogeneous foams with precisely tuned bubble volume fractions up to 13% and compare their behaviour with non-mesogenic silicon analogues. We show that microsphere expansion induces a particle-centred mesogenic interphase arising from local elastic distortion and preferential alignment of mesogenic units at the inclusion surface. At low bubble volume fraction (0.5 to 5%), these interfaces remain spatially isolated and produce a pronounced no-monotonic enhancement of damping, with the loss factor reaching tan-delta=0.2 even in the isotropic regime. At higher loading, interphase overlaps and mechanical constraints suppress this effect, and the dissipation returns towards baseline elastomeric values. Large-strain tensile tests and impact experiments exhibit the same non-monotonic trend, demonstrating that low density LCE forms achieve the highest mechanical energy absorption per unit mass. Compared with conventional high porosity polymer foams used for acoustic damping, these materials retain sufficient mechanical integrity to sustain impact loads, establishing a microstructural route to engineer high-performance damping in soft solids.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2602_18228
institution arXiv
publishDate 2026
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Properties of Liquid Crystalline Elastomer Foams
Dai, Oliver
Terentjev, Andrew
Terentjev, Eugene M.
Soft Condensed Matter
We investigate how controlled foaming alters the mechanical dissipation of liquid crystalline elastomers (LCEs). Using thermal expandable microspheres, we generate homogeneous foams with precisely tuned bubble volume fractions up to 13% and compare their behaviour with non-mesogenic silicon analogues. We show that microsphere expansion induces a particle-centred mesogenic interphase arising from local elastic distortion and preferential alignment of mesogenic units at the inclusion surface. At low bubble volume fraction (0.5 to 5%), these interfaces remain spatially isolated and produce a pronounced no-monotonic enhancement of damping, with the loss factor reaching tan-delta=0.2 even in the isotropic regime. At higher loading, interphase overlaps and mechanical constraints suppress this effect, and the dissipation returns towards baseline elastomeric values. Large-strain tensile tests and impact experiments exhibit the same non-monotonic trend, demonstrating that low density LCE forms achieve the highest mechanical energy absorption per unit mass. Compared with conventional high porosity polymer foams used for acoustic damping, these materials retain sufficient mechanical integrity to sustain impact loads, establishing a microstructural route to engineer high-performance damping in soft solids.
title Properties of Liquid Crystalline Elastomer Foams
topic Soft Condensed Matter
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2602.18228