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Bath electrospinning of continuous and scalable multifunctional MXene-infiltrated nanoyarns

journal contribution
posted on 2020-07-01, 00:00 authored by A Levitt, Shayan Seyedin, Jizhen Zhang, X Wang, Joselito RazalJoselito Razal, G Dion, Y Gogotsi
Electroactive yarns that are stretchable are desired for many electronic textile applications, including energy storage, soft robotics, and sensing. However, using current methods to produce these yarns, achieving high loadings of electroactive materials and simultaneously demonstrating stretchability is a critical challenge. Here, a one-step bath electrospinning technique is developed to effectively capture Ti3C2Tx MXene flakes throughout continuous nylon and polyurethane (PU) nanofiber yarns (nanoyarns). With up to ≈90 wt% MXene loading, the resulting MXene/nylon nanoyarns demonstrate high electrical conductivity (up to 1195 S cm−1). By varying the flake size and MXene concentration, nanoyarns achieve stretchability of up to 43% (MXene/nylon) and 263% (MXene/PU). MXene/nylon nanoyarn electrodes offer high specific capacitance in saturated LiClO4 electrolyte (440 F cm−3 at 5 mV s−1), with a wide voltage window of 1.25 V and high rate capability (72% between 5 and 500 mV s−1). As strain sensors, MXene/PU yarns demonstrate a wide sensing range (60% under cyclic stretching), high sensitivity (gauge factor of ≈17 in the range of 20–50% strain), and low drift. Utilizing the stretchability of polymer nanofibers and the electrical and electrochemical properties of MXene, MXene-based nanoyarns demonstrate potential in a wide range of applications, including stretchable electronics and body movement monitoring.

History

Journal

Small

Volume

16

Issue

26

Article number

2002158

Pagination

1 - 12

Publisher

Wiley

Location

Chichester, Eng.

ISSN

1613-6810

eISSN

1613-6829

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal