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Bioinspired design of strong, tough, and thermally stable polymeric materials via nanoconfinement

journal contribution
posted on 2018-09-25, 00:00 authored by Pingan Song, Jinfeng Dai, Guorong Chen, Youming Yu, Zhengping Fang, Weiwei LeiWeiwei Lei, Shenyuan Fu, Hao Wang, Zhi-Gang Chen
The combination of high strength, great toughness, and high heat resistance for polymeric materials is a vital factor for their practical applications. Unfortunately, until now it has remained a major challenge to achieve this performance portfolio because the mechanisms of strength and toughness are mutually exclusive. In the natural world, spider silk features the combination of high strength, great toughness, and excellent thermal stability, which are governed by the nanoconfinement of hydrogen-bonded β-sheets. Here, we report a facile bioinspired methodology for fabricating advanced polymer composite films with a high tensile strength of 152.8 MPa, a high stiffness of 4.35 GPa, and a tensile toughness of 30.3 MJ/m3 in addition to high thermal stability (69 °C higher than that of the polymer matrix) only by adding 2.0 wt % of artificial β-sheets. The mechanical and thermostable performance portfolio is superior to that of its counterparts developed to date because of the nanoconfinement and hydrogen-bond cross-linking effects of artificial β-sheets. Our study offers a facile biomimetic strategy for the design of integrated mechanically robust and thermostable polymer materials, which hold promise for many applications in electrical devices and tissue engineering fields.

History

Journal

ACS nano

Volume

12

Issue

9

Pagination

9266 - 9278

Publisher

American Chemical Society

Location

Washington, D.C.

eISSN

1936-086X

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2018, American Chemical Society