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Nanotube Sandwiches Could Lead To Better Composite Materials
Troy, N.Y. — By stacking layers of ceramic cloth with
interlocking nanotubes in between, a team of researchers has
created new composites with significantly improved properties
compared to traditional materials. The “nanotube sandwiches,”
which are described in the May 7 online edition of the journal
Nature Materials, could find use in a wide array of
structural applications.
“Nanotubes are a very versatile material with absolutely
fascinating physical properties, all the way from ballistic
conduction to really interesting mechanical behavior,” says
Pulickel Ajayan, the Henry Burlage Professor of Materials
Science and Engineering at Rensselaer and a lead author of the
paper, along with colleagues at the University of Hawaii at
Manoa. Some fundamental issues, however, have kept researchers
from realizing the full potential of nanotubes, particularly
when combining them with other materials to make composites.
The interface between the materials is not as strong as one
might expect, Ajayan notes, because it is difficult to disperse
nanotubes and to align them in an orderly way.
Ajayan and his colleagues have pioneered a process to help
overcome these difficulties, and they are putting it to use in
a wide variety of applications. For the current project, the
researchers are applying the process to a new area: reinforced
composite fabrics made from woven ceramic fibers. These
materials have been used for decades in structural
applications, but they tend to perform poorly in terms of
“through-thickness,” or the ability of a material to respond to
forces applied perpendicular to the fabric-stacking direction,
according to Ajayan.
“We have demonstrated that these through-thickness
properties can be improved by adding nanotube Velcro-like
structures between the layers,” says Mehrdad Ghasemi-Nejhad,
professor of mechanical engineering at Hawaii and a lead author
of the paper. To make the new materials, the researchers
deposit a forest of carbon nanotubes across the surface of a
cloth woven from fibers of silicon carbide — a ceramic compound
made from silicon and carbon. The fabric layers are infiltrated
with a high-temperature epoxy matrix, and then several layers
of cloth are stacked on top of each other to form a
three-dimensional composite “sandwich,” with interlocking
nanotubes acting to fasten the layers together.
“This is a very nice example of how to use nanotubes to
solve major existing problems, rather than going all-out to
make composites based on nanotubes alone, which has proven to
be a very challenging task,” Ajayan says. The team has
successfully made cloths up to roughly five inches by two
inches, and the process is easily scalable to make larger
materials, they say.
The researchers ran several experiments to test the new
material’s properties, and they found that the interlocking
nanotubes provided remarkable improvements in strength and
toughness under various loading conditions. The materials
performed extremely well in fracture tests, and they
demonstrated a five-fold increase in damping — or the ability
to dissipate energy — over the original ceramic composites
without nanotubes included. This suggests that the new
composites could be used in many applications where mechanical
properties are important, from automobile engines to golf club
shafts.
Tests also showed that both the thermal and electrical
conductivity of the new composites were significantly improved,
which means that they could potentially be employed as sensors
to monitor crack propagation in various structures, the
researchers note.
The University of Hawaii at Manoa team included Vinod Veedu,
a graduate student at the Hawaii Nanotechnology Laboratory;
Anyuan Cao, assistant professor of mechanical engineering; and
Kougen Ma, associate director of the Intelligent and Composite
Materials Laboratory. Several other Rensselaer researchers also
participated in the project: Caterina Soldano, a doctoral
student in physics, applied physics, and astronomy; Xuesong Li,
a doctoral student in materials science and engineering; and
Swastik Kar, a postdoctoral researcher in materials science and
engineering.
Ajayan received funding for the project from the Focus
Center-New York, which is part of the Interconnect Focus
Center; and Rensselaer’s National Science Foundation-funded
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center for the Directed
Assembly of Nanostructures.
Nanotechnology at Rensselaer
In September 2001, the National Science Foundation
selected Rensselaer as one of the six original sites for a new
Nanoscale Science and Engineering Center (NSEC). As part of the
U.S. National Nanotechnology Initiative, the program is housed
within the Rensselaer Nanotechnology Center and forms a
partnership between Rensselaer, the University of Illinois at
Urbana-Champaign, and Los Alamos National Laboratory. The
mission of Rensselaer’s Center for Directed Assembly of
Nanostructures is to integrate research, education, and
technology dissemination, and to serve as a national resource
for fundamental knowledge in directed assembly of
nanostructures. The five other original NSECs are located at
Harvard University, Columbia University, Cornell University,
Northwestern University, and Rice University.
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Published
May 8,
2006 |
Contact: Tiffany Lohwater
Phone: (518) 276-6542
E-mail: lohwat@rpi.edu |
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