Publication | Closed Access
Polymer nanoencapsulated mesoporous vanadia with unusual ductility at cryogenic temperatures
58
Citations
39
References
2008
Year
EngineeringNanoporous MaterialPolymer NanotechnologyUnusual DuctilityNanostructured PolymerPolymer NanocompositesChemistryNew MaterialNanoscale ChemistryNanoengineeringPolymer Nanostructured MaterialsCarbon AerogelsHybrid MaterialsPolymer ChemistryMaterials ScienceNanomanufacturingMicro-encapsulationMesoporous VanadiaMechanical PropertiesNanomaterialsPolymer ScienceAerogel-like Composite MaterialNanocompositePolymer Hybrid
An aerogel-like composite material was synthesized by casting a conformal 4–6 nm diisocyanate-derived polymer coating on the bird-nest like skeletal framework of mesoporous vanadia consisting of entangled 100–200 nm long, 30–40 nm thick worm-like objects. The new material does not fail even under high strain compression (>90%) and maintains a highly unusual ductility at cryogenic temperatures (−196 °C). By comparison, nanoparticulate silica crosslinked with the same polymer at the same bulk density (∼0.45 g cm−3) behaves as a typical polymer and metal, showing brittle behavior as the temperature decreases. The high strength of nanoencapsulated vanadia is attributed to interlocking of the skeletal nanoworms, and the high ductility at cryogenic temperatures to sintering-like melting and fusion of their polymer coating under compression.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1