In recent years, there has been a strong push towards the modern flexible electronic devices, such as
foldable phones or wearable biosensors and electronics. These devices are composed of numerous
thin layers of metallic and non-metallic materials and they must withstand harsh usage and a large
number of bends and deformations. For example, a foldable smartphone should be able to undergo
more than 100 000 open-close cycles without any electrical and mechanical failure. Such strict
conditions of use bring high demands not only on the used materials, but also on the connection
between them. Therefore, an attention to the adhesion between dissimilar materials has to be
investigated.
One way to quantify the adhesion between thin film and substrate material is the buckling -induced
delamination which uses compressive stress in the thin layer to form a buckle and delaminate it from
the substrate. However, the nature of the method itself induces normal and shear loading combination
at the tip of the delamination crack and it is important to be able to separate these two components.
For this reason, a mode-mixity parameter describing the ratio between shear and normal loading has
been introduced 30 years ago. However, in such time, there was only a limited number of material
combinations used in real applications, therefore it was deemed that the influence of mismatch
between material properties of the film and substrate can be taken as constant, regardless of the
material parameters mismatch. Contrary to this, recent advances in the field of modern materials
science promote the use of strongly dissimilar materials combinations, such as metallic thin films on
polymer or ceramic substrates. The introduction of such materials raises a question if the 30 years old
simplification can be still used. Recent research shows that it cannot and the material mismatch has to
be accounted for.
This project will combine the numerical modelling, analytical approaches and experimental
measurements of the thin films adhesion in order to quantify the ratio between normal and shear
loading for strongly dissimilar materials as a function of the so-called Dundurs parameters. The
numerical modelling enables us to check the materials mismatch influence for endless material
combinations and experimental techniques will be used to obtain input data as well as validate the
models and the research hypotheses, leading to a better understanding of the material delamination
processes and, therefore, more durable modern devices.
1