| Literature DB >> 26881290 |
Yuanyuan Shang1, Chunfei Hua1, Wenjing Xu2, Xiaoyang Hu3, Ying Wang1, Yu Zhou1, Yingjiu Zhang1, Xinjian Li1, Anyuan Cao2.
Abstract
Conventional straight fibers spun from carbon nanotubes have rather limited deformability; creating a spiral structure holds the promise to break this shape restriction and enhance structural flexibility. Here, we report up to one meter-length threads containing purely single-walled nanotubes twisted into spiral loops (about 1.3 × 10(5) loops per meter) with tunable fiber diameters and electrical conductivity. Because of significant increase of the loop number and long-range homogeneity, the fibers display many unique properties (e.g., self-shrinking and forming extremely entangled structure, fast stretching with great resilience, large-degree axial and lateral deflection, and excellent fatigue resistance) that are difficult to achieve in straight yarns or short helical segments. They also have potential applications as macroscopic fiber-shaped temperature sensors and deformable gas sensors. Our long spiral fibers may be configured into versatile structures such as nanotextiles for developing wearable electronics and multifunctional fabrics.Entities:
Keywords: Spiral fiber; carbon nanotube; fiber-shaped device; gas sensor; nanotextile
Year: 2016 PMID: 26881290 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04773
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189