| Literature DB >> 27455047 |
Baolei Zhu1, Manuel Noack1, Remi Merindol1, Christopher Barner-Kowollik2,3, Andreas Walther1.
Abstract
Nature provides design paradigms for adaptive, self-healing, and synergistic high-performance structural materials. Nacre's brick-and-mortar architecture is renowned for combining stiffness, toughness, strength, and lightweightness. Although elaborate approaches exist to mimic its static structure and performance, and to incorporate functionalities for the engineering world, there is a profound gap in addressing adaptable mechanical properties, particularly using remote, quick, and spatiotemporal triggers. Here, we demonstrate a generic approach to control the mechanical properties of nacre-inspired nanocomposites by designing a photothermal energy cascade using colloidal graphene as light-harvesting unit and coupling it to molecularly designed, thermoreversible, supramolecular bonds in the nanoconfined soft phase of polymer/nanoclay nacre-mimetics. The light intensity leads to adaptive steady-states balancing energy uptake and dissipation. It programs the mechanical properties and switches the materials from high stiffness/strength to higher toughness within seconds under spatiotemporal control. We envisage possibilities beyond mechanical materials, for example, light-controlled (re)shaping or actuation in highly reinforced nanocomposites.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive materials; bioinspired materials; mechanical properties; supramolecular polymers; toughness
Year: 2016 PMID: 27455047 DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.6b02127
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nano Lett ISSN: 1530-6984 Impact factor: 11.189