Publication | Open Access
High-Strength Composite Fibers: Realizing True Potential of Carbon Nanotubes in Polymer Matrix through Continuous Reticulate Architecture and Molecular Level Couplings
259
Citations
27
References
2009
Year
Materials ScienceTrue PotentialMolecular Level CouplingsFiber ReinforcementEngineeringHigh-performance FiberNanomaterialsMechanical EngineeringPolymer ScienceComposite TechnologyHigh-strength Composite FibersContinuous-fibre CompositeSustainable CompositeThermoplastic CompositeNanocompositeNanotubesCarbon NanotubesFiber-reinforced Composite
Carbon nanotubes have unprecedented mechanical properties as defect-free nanoscale building blocks, but their potential has not been fully realized in composite materials due to weakness at the interfaces. Here we demonstrate that through load-transfer-favored three-dimensional architecture and molecular level couplings with polymer chains, true potential of CNTs can be realized in composites as initially envisioned. Composite fibers with reticulate nanotube architectures show order of magnitude improvement in strength compared to randomly dispersed short CNT reinforced composites reported before. The molecular level couplings between nanotubes and polymer chains results in drastic differences in the properties of thermoset and thermoplastic composite fibers, which indicate that conventional macroscopic composite theory fails to explain the overall hybrid behavior at nanoscale.
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