HVNM Advanced Theory & Numerical Methods¶
This page documents the thermodynamic foundations, interphase physics, damage mechanics, and numerical methods underlying the HVNM. For the constitutive equations, see HVNMLocal — Full Model Reference. For protocol derivations, see HVNM Protocol Equations & Derivations. For the unfilled HVM theory, see HVM Advanced Theory & Numerical Methods.
Thermodynamic Framework¶
Helmholtz Free Energy¶
The total Helmholtz free energy density extends the HVM (Thermodynamic Framework) with the interphase contribution and interfacial damage:
Each subnetwork energy is a Gaussian chain model (neo-Hookean):
Permanent network (hydrodynamically amplified):
where \(X(\phi) = 1 + 2.5\phi + 14.1\phi^2\) is the Guth-Gold strain amplification factor.
Exchangeable (vitrimer) network:
Dissociative (physical) network:
Interphase network (NEW):
The new scalar damage variable \(D_{int} \in [0,1]\) couples to \(\Psi_I\), representing interfacial debonding. \(D\) and \(D_{int}\) are independent: permanent network scission and interfacial failure are distinct mechanisms.
Clausius-Duhem Derivation¶
Applying the Clausius-Duhem procedure to \(\Psi_{tot}\), the total Cauchy stress is:
where \(\tilde{G}_P = G_P X(\phi)\) is the amplified permanent modulus.
The remaining terms yield four dissipation contributions, each individually non-negative:
Exchangeable network dissipation:
Dissociative network dissipation:
Interphase network dissipation (NEW):
Damage dissipation (dual):
Satisfied because \(\Psi_P, \Psi_I \geq 0\) and \(\dot{D}, \dot{D}_{int} \geq 0\) (damage is irreversible or controlled by self-healing).
Nanoparticle Interphase Model¶
Three-Layer Interphase Structure¶
Following Papon et al. (2012) and confirmed by NMR and scattering studies (Berriot et al. 2002, Kim et al. 2024), the interphase around each nanoparticle consists of three concentric layers:
Glassy layer (thickness \(\delta_g \sim 1\)–2 nm): Chains strongly adsorbed/bonded to the NP surface with dynamics \(>100\times\) slower than bulk. In the HVNM, this layer is treated as part of the rigid NP inclusion, increasing the effective filler fraction:
Mobile interphase layer (thickness \(\delta_m \sim 5\)–20 nm): Chains with intermediate dynamics – slower than bulk but not glassy. This is the interphase subnetwork (I) in the HVNM, with volume fraction:
For small \(\delta_m / R_{NP}\), this reduces to \(\phi_I \approx 3\phi_{eff}\,\delta_m / (R_{NP} + \delta_g)\).
Bulk matrix (remainder): Unperturbed dynamics, described by the P, E, D subnetworks.
Note
The RheoJAX implementation uses the simplified formula \(\phi_I = \phi[(R_{NP} + \delta_m)^3/R_{NP}^3 - 1]\), which absorbs \(\delta_g\) into \(R_{NP}\).
Temperature-Dependent Interphase Thickness¶
The mobile interphase thickness decreases with temperature following a WLF-type dependence:
where \(T_g^{int}\) is the elevated glass transition in the interphase, \(T_\infty = T_g^{int} - C_2^{int}\) is the Vogel temperature, and \(\alpha_{int} \sim 0.5\)–1 is a scaling exponent.
Physical consequence: For \(T \gg T_g^{int}\), \(\delta_m \to 0\) and the interphase contribution vanishes, recovering the unfilled HVM. Near \(T_g^{int}\), the interphase is thick and NP reinforcement is maximized.
Interphase Modulus¶
The interphase modulus is expressed as:
where \(\beta_I \in [1.5, 10]\) is the reinforcement ratio, dependent on:
Surface chemistry: Covalently grafted NPs (\(\beta_I \sim 3\)–10) vs. physically adsorbed (\(\beta_I \sim 1.5\)–3)
Chain-NP interaction strength: Quantified by the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter \(\chi_{NP}\)
Temperature: \(\beta_I\) decreases toward 1 as \(T\) increases well above \(T_g^{int}\)
The effective interphase modulus is:
Interphase Percolation¶
When \(\phi_I\) exceeds the percolation threshold \(\phi_I^{perc} \approx 0.15\)–0.30, a connected interphase network forms spanning the entire sample. This produces dramatic stiffening and slowing of dynamics. The percolation-enhanced modulus is:
where \(\kappa\) is the percolation enhancement factor and \((\cdot)^+\) denotes the Macaulay bracket. Below percolation (\(\phi_I < \phi_I^{perc}\)), the interphase acts as isolated shells around NPs. Above percolation, the connected network adds geometric stiffening.
Strain Amplification in the Interphase¶
The interphase chains experience amplified strain because the rigid NP cores do not deform. The effective velocity gradient experienced by the interphase is:
where \(X_I = X(\phi_{eff})\) uses the effective NP volume fraction (including glassy layer). This amplification appears in the affine terms of the interphase evolution equation:
Physical consequence: Strain amplification means interphase chains reach large stretch (and damage threshold) earlier than bulk matrix chains at the same macroscopic strain. This explains the early onset of nonlinearity in filled systems.
Non-Affine Interphase Dynamics¶
An alternative to strain amplification introduces a monomer-particle friction parameter \(\xi_{NP}\) that produces non-affine, partially suppressed deformation:
where \(\xi_{NP} \in [0, 1]\):
\(\xi_{NP} = 0\): Full affine deformation (all strain transmitted to interphase)
\(\xi_{NP} = 1\): Completely pinned layer (no deformation)
The two approaches (strain amplification and friction) are complementary: \(X_I > 1\) models the geometric concentration of strain; \(\xi_{NP}\) models the dynamical suppression. They can be combined as \((1 - \xi_{NP}) X_I\), but this introduces a degeneracy. The recommended default is to use \(X_I\) alone.
Enhanced Damage Mechanics¶
Two Damage Variables¶
The HVNM carries two independent scalar damage variables:
Permanent network damage \(D\) (chain scission, identical to HVM):
Interfacial damage \(D_{int}\) (debonding/desorption/interfacial bond rupture):
where the interfacial chain stretch is:
Key differences from permanent damage:
Lower critical stretch \(\lambda_{crit}^{int} < \lambda_{crit}\): Confined interphase chains have less extensibility, and the interface concentrates stress due to modulus mismatch.
Self-healing term \(-h_{int}(T)\,(D_{int})^{n_h}\): Above \(T_v^{int}\), interfacial BER can reform broken bonds, reducing \(D_{int}\) over time. The healing rate follows TST:
\[h_{int}(T) = h_0 \exp\!\left(-\frac{E_a^{heal}}{k_B T}\right)\]The exponent \(n_h \in [0.5, 1]\) controls healing kinetics shape (\(n_h = 1\) for first-order, \(n_h = 0.5\) for diffusion-limited).
This makes interfacial damage reversible above \(T_v^{int}\) but irreversible below it – the hallmark of vitrimer nanocomposites.
Weissenberg Number Fracture Criterion¶
The competition between loading rate and BER rate determines whether the material flows or fractures, captured by dual Weissenberg numbers:
Three fracture regimes:
Regime |
Condition |
Behavior |
|---|---|---|
I: Flow |
Wimat \(\ll 1\), Wiint \(\ll 1\) |
All networks relax faster than load accumulates. Viscous flow, no damage. |
II: Partial |
Wimat \(\ll 1\), Wiint \(\gtrsim 1\) |
Matrix flows but interphase cannot relax. \(D_{int}\) grows. Ductile. |
III: Brittle |
Wimat \(\gg 1\), Wiint \(\gg 1\) |
Neither network relaxes. Both \(D\) and \(D_{int}\) grow. Thermoset-like. |
Crack tip analysis: Near a propagating crack tip, the local strain rate diverges as \(\dot{\epsilon} \sim v_{crack}/r\). The fracture process zone size is:
Since \(k_{BER}^{int} < k_{BER}^{mat}\), the interphase fracture zone is larger (\(r_{fz}^{int} > r_{fz}^{mat}\)), meaning interfacial damage extends further ahead of the crack tip. This dissipates energy and is the micromechanical origin of NP toughening in vitrimer nanocomposites.
Cooperative Shielding (4-Network)¶
The HVM’s cooperative shielding concept is extended to include the interphase. The effective permanent chain stretch is:
where \(G_\alpha(t)\) represents each network’s current load share.
NP toughening mechanism: The interphase carries load that would otherwise stress the permanent network, delaying \(D > 0\). When \(D_{int}\) grows (interface fails), shielding decreases and load transfers to the permanent network, causing delayed permanent damage – a cascading failure that produces gradual, ductile failure.
Payne Effect¶
The Payne effect (strain-amplitude-dependent modulus drop in filled rubbers) emerges naturally from the HVNM:
Small \(\gamma_0\): Interphase intact (\(D_{int} \approx 0\)), full modulus \(G' = G_P X + G_E + G_D + G_{I,eff} X_I\)
Increasing \(\gamma_0\): Interphase natural state begins tracking deformation via BER, reducing \(\sigma_I\)
Large \(\gamma_0\): \(\sigma_I \to 0\) at steady state, \(G'\) drops to unfilled level
The critical strain for Payne onset is:
Higher \(\phi\) lowers the onset strain through the \(X_I\) amplification factor. See LAOS Derivation for detailed LAOS analysis.
Mullins Effect¶
Under cyclic loading, the HVNM predicts stress softening through three mechanisms:
Irreversible (from \(D\)): Permanent chain scission softens the elastic response permanently.
Partially reversible (from \(D_{int}\)): Interfacial damage reduces interphase stress, but self-healing above \(T_v^{int}\) partially restores it between cycles.
Fully reversible (from BER): Bond exchange in transient networks relaxes stress during each cycle.
The Mullins effect in vitrimers is temperature-dependent: above \(T_v^{int}\), softening is partially recovered between cycles (due to self-healing); below \(T_v^{int}\), it is permanent. See Cyclic Loading & Mullins Effect for the full cyclic loading analysis.
Diffusion-Limited Slow Mode¶
Karim, Vernerey & Sain (Macromolecules, 2025) identified that the long-term mechanical response of vitrimers requires a constant-rate kinetic term representing diffusion-driven chain dynamics slower than the BER timescale. In a nanocomposite, this is physically motivated by:
Reptation-like chain diffusion through the network (\(\tau_{diff} \gg \tau_{BER}\))
Slow chain extraction from the interphase as chains desorb from NP surfaces
Long-range topological reorganization requiring multiple sequential BER events
The HVNM adds a constant background rate \(k_{diff}\) to both kinetics:
The diffusion rates follow simple Arrhenius:
Key properties:
The diffusion activation energy \(E_a^{diff}\) is typically 1.5–3\(\times\) larger than \(E_a^{mat}\), reflecting the higher barrier for coordinated multi-bond rearrangement.
The diffusion rate is stress-independent (not TST-activated) because it represents thermally driven Brownian motion.
\(k_{diff}^{int} \ll k_{diff}^{mat}\) because chain extraction from NP surfaces is entropically penalized.
When to enable: The include_diffusion=True flag should be used
when stress relaxation data shows a long-time tail beyond the BER
relaxation, or when creep data shows continuing slow deformation at
\(t \gg 1/k_{BER}\).
Numerical Implementation¶
ODE state vector: 17 components in simple shear (18 with interfacial damage):
Index |
Component |
Description |
|---|---|---|
0–2 |
\(\mu^E_{xx}, \mu^E_{xy}, \mu^E_{yy}\) |
Exchangeable distribution tensor |
3–5 |
\(\mu^{E,nat}_{xx}, \mu^{E,nat}_{xy}, \mu^{E,nat}_{yy}\) |
Exchangeable natural state |
6–8 |
\(\mu^D_{xx}, \mu^D_{xy}, \mu^D_{yy}\) |
Dissociative distribution tensor |
9–11 |
\(\mu^I_{xx}, \mu^I_{xy}, \mu^I_{yy}\) |
Interphase distribution tensor |
12–14 |
\(\mu^{I,nat}_{xx}, \mu^{I,nat}_{xy}, \mu^{I,nat}_{yy}\) |
Interphase natural state |
15 |
\(\gamma\) |
Accumulated strain |
16 |
\(D\) |
Permanent network damage |
17 |
\(D_{int}\) |
Interfacial damage (if |
ODE solver: diffrax Tsit5 (explicit 5th-order Runge-Kutta) with
PIDController adaptive stepping (rtol=1e-8, atol=1e-10).
Note
Implicit solvers (e.g., Kvaerno5) were tested but produce
TracerBoolConversionError due to lineax LU transpose checks
during JAX tracing. Tsit5 is the recommended solver.
Stiffness at high \(\phi\):
High \(\phi\) amplifies the affine deformation (\(X_I \dot{\gamma}\)),
creating stiff ODEs. If the solver diverges, increase max_steps or
reduce the shear rate.
Square-root guard: The BER rate computation uses:
safe_stretch = jnp.sqrt(jnp.maximum(stretch_invariant, 0.0) + 1e-30)
This prevents infinite gradients at \(\sigma_{VM} = 0\).
Initial conditions: All tensors at identity (\(\mu_{xx} = \mu_{yy} = 1\), \(\mu_{xy} = 0\)), \(\gamma = 0\), \(D = D_{int} = 0\).
\(\phi = 0\) Recovery Verification¶
When \(\phi = 0\), the HVNM must recover the HVM exactly. Mathematically:
\(X(\phi=0) = 1\) and \(X_I = X(\phi_{eff}=0) = 1\): No strain amplification.
\(\phi_I = 0 \cdot [(\ldots)^3 - 1] = 0\): Zero interphase volume fraction.
\(G_{I,eff} = \beta_I G_E \cdot 0 = 0\): No interphase modulus contribution.
The \(D_{int}\) equation decouples (no interphase stress to drive damage).
The \(\boldsymbol{\mu}^I\) equations decouple (zero prefactor in stress).
The remaining equations are identical to HVM with \(D = 0\), \(X = 1\). This is verified numerically to machine precision (relative error \(< 10^{-14}\)) across all six protocols in the test suite.
References¶
Vernerey, F.J., Long, R. & Brighenti, R. (2017). “A statistically-based continuum theory for polymers with transient networks.” J. Mech. Phys. Solids, 107, 1–20. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2017.05.016
Vernerey, F.J. (2018). “Transient response of nonlinear polymer networks: A kinetic theory.” J. Mech. Phys. Solids, 115, 230–247. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2018.02.018
PDFVernerey, F.J., Brighenti, R., Long, R. & Shen, T. (2018). “Statistical Damage Mechanics of Polymer Networks.” Macromolecules, 51(17), 6609–6622. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.8b01052
Meng, F., Saed, M.O. & Terentjev, E.M. (2019). “Elasticity and Relaxation in Full and Partial Vitrimer Networks.” Macromolecules, 52(19), 7423–7429. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.9b01123
Shen, T., Song, Z., Cai, S. & Vernerey, F.J. (2021). “Nonsteady fracture of transient networks: The case of vitrimer.” PNAS, 118(29), e2105974118. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2105974118
Song, Z., Wang, Z. & Cai, S. (2021). “Mechanics of vitrimer with hybrid networks.” Mech. Mater., 153, 103687. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mechmat.2020.103687
Papon, A., Montes, H., Lequeux, F. et al. (2012). “Glass-transition temperature gradient in nanocomposites: Evidence from nuclear magnetic resonance and differential scanning calorimetry.” Phys. Rev. Lett., 108, 065702. https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevLett.108.065702
Berriot, J., Montes, H., Lequeux, F. et al. (2002). “Filler-elastomer interaction in model filled rubbers, a 1H NMR study.” J. Non-Crystalline Solids, 307–310, 719–724. https://doi.org/10.1016/S0022-3093(02)01552-1
Duan, P., Zhao, H., Chen, Q. et al. (2023). “Insights into Uniaxial Tension and Relaxation of Nanorod-Filled Polymer Vitrimer Nanocomposites: A Molecular Dynamics Simulation.” Macromolecules, 56(12), 4468–4481. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.3c00296
Li, Z., Zhao, H., Duan, P., Zhang, L. & Liu, J. (2024). “Manipulating the Properties of Polymer Vitrimer Nanocomposites by Designing Dual Dynamic Covalent Bonds.” Langmuir, 40(14), 7769–7780. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.4c00699
Duan, P., Zhao, H., Liu, M. et al. (2024). “Molecular Insights into the Topological Transition, Fracture, and Self-Healing Behavior of Vitrimer Composites with Exchangeable Interfaces.” Macromolecules, 57, 9725–9736. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.4c01541
Kim, J., Thompson, B.R., Tominaga, T. et al. (2024). “Suppression of Segmental Chain Dynamics on a Particle’s Surface in Well-Dispersed Polymer Nanocomposites.” ACS Macro Lett., 13(6), 720–725. https://doi.org/10.1021/acsmacrolett.4c00168
Karim, M.R., Vernerey, F. & Sain, T. (2025). “Constitutive Modeling of Vitrimers and Their Nanocomposites Based on Transient Network Theory.” Macromolecules, 58(10), 4899–4912. DOI: 10.1021/acs.macromol.4c02872
PDFLi, Z., Zhao, H., Zhang, L., Liu, J. et al. (2025). “Designing All-Vitrimer Nanocomposites to Combine Low Energy Consumption, Mechanical Robust and Recyclability.” Nano Energy, 142, 111215.
Alkhoury, K. & Chester, S.A. (2025). “A chemo-thermo-mechanically coupled theory of photo-reacting polymers: Application to modeling photo-degradation with irradiation-driven heat transfer.” J. Mech. Phys. Solids, 197, 106050. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2025.106050
Wagner, R.J. & Silberstein, M.N. (2025). “A foundational framework for the mesoscale modeling of dynamic elastomers and gels.” J. Mech. Phys. Solids, 194, 105914. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jmps.2024.105914
Hayashi, M. & Ricarte, R.G. (2025). “Towards the next development of vitrimers: Recent key topics for the practical application and understanding of the fundamental physics.” Prog. Polym. Sci., 170, 102026. DOI: 10.1016/j.progpolymsci.2025.102026
PDFZhao, H., Wei, X., Fang, Y. et al. (2022). “Molecular dynamics simulation of the structural, mechanical, and reprocessing properties of vitrimers based on a dynamic covalent polymer network.” Macromolecules, 55, 1091–1103. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.macromol.1c02034