Technology
A smarter way to make ultraviolet light beams — Existing coherent ultraviolet light sources are power hungry, bulky and expensive. University of Michigan researchers have found a better way to build compact ultraviolet sources with…
Biocompatible graphene transistor array reads cellular signals — Researchers have demonstrated, for the first time, a graphene-based transistor array that is compatible with living biological cells and capable of recording the electrical signals…
Researchers find some smartphone models more vulnerable to attack — New research from North Carolina State University shows that some smartphones specifically designed to support the Android mobile platform have incorporated additional features that…
MIT: New algorithm may improve defensive driving — In 2008, according to the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, 2.3 million automobile crashes occurred at intersections across the United States, resulting in some 7,000…
Researchers use CT to recreate Stradivarius violin — Using computed tomography (CT) imaging and advanced manufacturing techniques, a team of experts has created a reproduction of a 1704 Stradivarius violin. Three-dimensional images of…
Terminator-style info-vision takes step towards reality — The streaming of real-time information across your field of vision is a step closer to reality with the development of a prototype contact lens that could potentially provide the wearer…
Scientists invent long-lasting, near infrared-emitting material — Materials that emit visible light after being exposed to sunlight are commonplace and can be found in everything from emergency signage to glow-in-the-dark stickers. But until now,…
Team of researchers develop world's lightest material — A team of researchers from UC Irvine, HRL Laboratories and the California Institute of Technology have developed the world's lightest material - with a density of 0.9 mg/cc - about…
Humans can control a cursor with power of thought — The act of mind reading is something usually reserved for science-fiction movies but researchers in America have used a technique, usually associated with identifying epilepsy, for…
Nanoparticles improve solar collection efficiency — Using minute graphite particles 1000 times smaller than the width of a human hair, mechanical engineers at Arizona State University hope to boost the efficiency - and profitability…
Where am I? > Home > News > Technology

Rice University lab creates self-strengthening nanocomposite

Science Centric | 28 March 2011 16:12 GMT
Printable version A clip for your blog or website E-mail the story to a friend
Bookmark or share the story on your social network Vote for this article Decrease text size Increase text size
DON'T MISS —
Researchers lay out vision for lighting 'revolution'
Researchers lay out vision for lighting 'revolution' — A 'revolution' in the way we illuminate our world is imminent, according to a paper published this week by two professors…
People, not just a building, make for 'place'
People, not just a building, make for 'place' — A building designed to recapture the past may bring nostalgia, but the end product may not capture current realities of a…
More Technology

Researchers at Rice University have created a synthetic material that gets stronger from repeated stress much like the body strengthens bones and muscles after repeated workouts.

Work by the Rice lab of Pulickel Ajayan, professor in mechanical engineering and materials science and of chemistry, shows the potential of stiffening polymer-based nanocomposites with carbon nanotube fillers. The team reported its discovery this month in the journal ACS Nano.

The trick, it seems, lies in the complex, dynamic interface between nanostructures and polymers in carefully engineered nanocomposite materials.

Brent Carey, a graduate student in Ajayan's lab, found the interesting property while testing the high-cycle fatigue properties of a composite he made by infiltrating a forest of vertically aligned, multiwalled nanotubes with polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS), an inert, rubbery polymer. To his great surprise, repeatedly loading the material didn't seem to damage it at all. In fact, the stress made it stiffer.

Carey, whose research is sponsored by a NASA fellowship, used dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) to test their material. He found that after an astounding 3.5 million compressions (five per second) over about a week's time, the stiffness of the composite had increased by 12 percent and showed the potential for even further improvement.

'It took a bit of tweaking to get the instrument to do this,' Carey said. 'DMA generally assumes that your material isn't changing in any permanent way. In the early tests, the software kept telling me, 'I've damaged the sample!' as the stiffness increased. I also had to trick it with an unsolvable program loop to achieve the high number of cycles.'

Materials scientists know that metals can strain-harden during repeated deformation, a result of the creation and jamming of defects - known as dislocations - in their crystalline lattice. Polymers, which are made of long, repeating chains of atoms, don't behave the same way.

The team is not sure precisely why their synthetic material behaves as it does. 'We were able to rule out further cross-linking in the polymer as an explanation,' Carey said. 'The data shows that there's very little chemical interaction, if any, between the polymer and the nanotubes, and it seems that this fluid interface is evolving during stressing.'

'The use of nanomaterials as a filler increases this interfacial area tremendously for the same amount of filler material added,' Ajayan said. 'Hence, the resulting interfacial effects are amplified as compared with conventional composites.

'For engineered materials, people would love to have a composite like this,' he said. 'This work shows how nanomaterials in composites can be creatively used.'

They also found one other truth about this unique phenomenon: Simply compressing the material didn't change its properties; only dynamic stress - deforming it again and again - made it stiffer.

Carey drew an analogy between their material and bones. 'As long as you're regularly stressing a bone in the body, it will remain strong,' he said. 'For example, the bones in the racket arm of a tennis player are denser. Essentially, this is an adaptive effect our body uses to withstand the loads applied to it.

'Our material is similar in the sense that a static load on our composite doesn't cause a change. You have to dynamically stress it in order to improve it.'

Cartilage may be a better comparison - and possibly even a future candidate for nanocomposite replacement. 'We can envision this response being attractive for developing artificial cartilage that can respond to the forces being applied to it but remains pliable in areas that are not being stressed,' Carey said.

Both researchers noted this is the kind of basic research that asks more questions than it answers. While they can easily measure the material's bulk properties, it's an entirely different story to understand how the polymer and nanotubes interact at the nanoscale.

'People have been trying to address the question of how the polymer layer around a nanoparticle behaves,' Ajayan said. 'It's a very complicated problem. But fundamentally, it's important if you're an engineer of nanocomposites.

'From that perspective, I think this is a beautiful result. It tells us that it's feasible to engineer interfaces that make the material do unconventional things.'

Source: Rice University


Leave a comment
The details you provide on this page [e-mail address] will not be used to send unsolicited e-mail, and will not be supplied to a third party! Please note that we can not promise to give everyone a response. Comments are fully moderated. Once approved they will be posted within 24 hours.
Expand the form to leave a comment

RSS FEEDS, NEWSLETTER
Find the topic you want. Science Centric offers several RSS feeds for the News section.

Or subscribe for our Newsletter, a free e-mail publication. It is published practically every day.

Wake Forest University offers virtual interviews for admissionsWake Forest University offers virtual interviews for admissions

— Using a webcam, a microphone and the Internet, some students applying to Wake Forest University can now sit in their living rooms at home and have a 'face-to-face'…

New hybrid nanostructures detect nanoscale magnetismNew hybrid nanostructures detect nanoscale magnetism

— A key challenge of nanotechnology research is investigating how different materials behave at lengths of merely one-billionth of a metre. When shrunk to such tiny…

Scientists study fusion to search for an energy solutionScientists study fusion to search for an energy solution

— Scientists at UC San Diego's Centre for Energy Research (CER) know we need to scale up successful fusion processes to produce energy in an efficient, economical,…

Computers determine when to stop searches at seaComputers determine when to stop searches at sea

— British researchers are developing a new computer model to predict how long someone will survive when lost at sea, which will in turn determine when a search and…

Popular tags in Technology: graphene · laser · nanotube · semiconductor