| Literature DB >> 28880005 |
Ludovic Dumée1,2, Kallista Sears3, Jürg Schütz4, Niall Finn5, Mikel Duke6, Stephen Gray7.
Abstract
In this study, we focus on processing and characterizing composite material structures made of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) and reproducibly engineering macro-pores inside their structure. Highly porous bucky-papers were fabricated from pure carbon nanotubes by dispersing and stabilizing large 1 μm polystyrene beads within a carbon nanotube suspension. The polystyrene beads, homogeneously dispersed across the thickness of the bucky-papers, were then either dissolved or carbonized to generate macro cavities of different shape and properties. The impact of adding these macro cavities on the porosity, specific surface area and Young's modulus was investigated and some benefits of the macro cavities will be demonstrated.Entities:
Keywords: bucky-paper; carbon nanotube; sacrificial beads; tuning porosity
Year: 2011 PMID: 28880005 PMCID: PMC5448496 DOI: 10.3390/ma4030553
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Materials (Basel) ISSN: 1996-1944 Impact factor: 3.623
Figure 1Scanning electron micrographs (SEM) of non bead reinforced bucky-papers (BP). (1A) surface; (1B) cross section. The scale bar corresponds to 1 μm.
Figure 2SEM images of BPs surface and cross sections for 1 μm poly-styrene bead reinforced BPs. Images A1 and A2 correspond to the composite after filtration of the bead/CNT suspension, while B1 and B2 were taken on samples after bead dissolution, and C1 and C2 on the bead/CNT composite after carbonization. The micrographs were taken at a tilt of 52°. The scale bars on the micrographs correspond to 1 μm.
Figure 3Altisurf measurement of a BP thickness; the sample adhered to carbon tape, and on a glass slide used as a reference. The resolution of the light beam was 20 nm.
Figure 4Pore size distribution of the composite membranes determined by perm-porometry.
Composite properties.
| Thickness | Tensile Modulus | Average pore size | Bubble point | BET | Permeability | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| μm | GPa | nm | kPa | m2/g | x10 −11 kg.m−1.h−1.Pa−1 | |
| BP reference | 10 (+/−2) | 0.95 | 32 | 783 | 197 | 2.61 |
| BP + beads | 8 (+/−3) | 0.35 | 37 | 532 | 90.7 | 2.55 |
| BP + beads dissolved | 7 (+/−2) | 0.21 | 32 | 735 | 135.6 | 2.23 |
| BP + beads carbonized | 6 (+/−3) | 0.99 | 33 | 760 | 97.5 | 1.91 |
Figure 5Tensile/extension typical curves for the series of samples.
Figure 6Air permeation across the BP samples.