Graphene Outperforms Carbon Nanotubes for Creating Stronger, More Crack-Resistant Materials
New Study Shows Graphene Could Help Prevent
Fracture and Fatigue Failure in Composite-Based Structures
Including Windmill Blades and Aircraft Wings
Three new studies from researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic
Institute illustrate why graphene should be the nanomaterial of
choice to strengthen composite materials used in everything
from wind turbines to aircraft wings.
Composites infused with graphene are stronger, stiffer, and
less prone to failure than composites infused with carbon
nanotubes or other nanoparticles, according to the studies.
This means graphene, an atom-thick sheet of carbon atoms
arranged like a nanoscale chain-link fence, could be a key
enabler in the development of next-generation nanocomposite
materials.
“I’ve been working in nanocomposites for 10 years, and
graphene is the best one I’ve ever seen in terms of mechanical
properties,” said Nikhil Koratkar,
professor in the Department of Mechanical,
Aerospace, and Nuclear Engineering at Rensselaer, who led
the studies. “Graphene is far superior to carbon nanotubes or
any other known nanofiller in transferring its exceptional
strength and mechanical properties to a host material.”
Results of Koratkar’s studies are detailed in three recently
published papers: “Fracture and Fatigue in Graphene
Nanocomposites,” published in Small; “Enhanced
Mechanical Properties of Nanocomposites at Low Graphene
Content,” published in ACS Nano; and “Buckling
Resistant Graphene Nanocomposites,” published in the journal
Applied Physics Letters.
Advanced composites are increasingly a key component in the
design of new windmill blades, aircraft, and other applications
requiring ultra-light, high-strength materials. Epoxy composite
materials are extremely lightweight, but can be brittle and
prone to fracture. Koratkar’s team has infused the advanced
composites with stacks, or platelets, of graphene. Each stack
is only a few nanometers thick. The research team also infused
epoxy composites with carbon nanotubes.
Epoxy materials infused with graphene exhibited far superior
performance. In fact, adding graphene equal to 0.1 percent of
the weight of the composite boosted the strength and the
stiffness of the material to the same degree as adding carbon
nanotubes equal to 1 percent of the weight of the composite.
This gain, on the measure of one order of magnitude, highlights
the promise of graphene, Koratkar said. The graphene fillers
also boosted the composite’s resistance to fatigue crack
propagation by nearly two orders of magnitude, compared to the
baseline epoxy material.
Though graphene and carbon nanotubes are nearly identical in
their chemical makeup and mechanical properties, graphene is
far better than carbon nanotubes at lending its attributes to a
material with which it’s mixed.
“Nanotubes are incredibly strong, but they’re of little use
mechanically if they don’t transfer their properties to the
composite,” Koratkar said. “A chain is only as strong as its
weakest link, and if that link is between the nanotube and the
polymer, then that is what determines the overall mechanical
properties. It doesn’t matter if the nanotubes are super strong
or super stiff, if the interface with the polymer is weak, that
interface is going to fail.”
Koratkar said graphene has three distinct advantages over
carbon nanotubes. The first advantage is the rough and wrinkled
surface texture of graphene, caused by a very high density of
surface defects. These defects are a result of the thermal
exfoliation process that the Rensselaer research team used to
manufacture bulk quantities of graphene from graphite. These
“wrinkly” surfaces interlock extremely well with the
surrounding polymer material, helping to boost the interfacial
load transfer between graphene and the host material.
The second advantage is surface area. As a planer sheet,
graphene benefits from considerably more contact with the
polymer material than the tube-shaped carbon nanotubes. This is
because the polymer chains are unable to enter the interior of
the nanotubes, but both the top and bottom surfaces of the
graphene sheet can be in close contact with the polymer
matrix.
The third benefit is geometry. When microcracks in the
composite structure encounter a two-dimensional graphene sheet,
they are deflected, or forced to tilt and twist around the
sheet. This process helps to absorb the energy that is
responsible for propagating the crack. Crack deflection
processes are far more effective for two-dimensional sheets
with a high aspect ratio such as graphene, as compared to
one-dimensional nanotubes.
Koratkar said the aerospace and wind power industries are
seeking new materials with which to design stronger,
longer-lived rotor and wind turbine blades. His research group
plans to further investigate how graphene can benefit this
goal. Graphene shows great promise for this because it can be
produced from graphite, which is available in bulk quantities
and at relatively low cost, he said, which means mass
production of graphene is likely to be far more cost effective
than nanotubes.
Co-authors on the three papers include Rensselaer mechanical
engineering graduate students Mohammad A. Rafiee, Javad Rafiee,
and Iti Srivastava; as along with Professor Zhong-Zhen Yu’s
group at the Beijing University of Chemical Technology.
Koratkar’s research is funded by the U.S. Office of Naval
Research (ONR), U.S. Army, and the U.S. National Science
Foundation (NSF).
For more information on Koratkar’s research, visit: http://www.rpi.edu/~koratn.
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Published
April 26,
2010 |
Contact: Michael Mullaney
Phone: (518) 276-6161
E-mail: mullam@rpi.edu |
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