posted on 2017-09-22, 00:00authored byDmitri
E. Tsentalovich, Robert J. Headrick, Francesca Mirri, Junli Hao, Natnael Behabtu, Colin C. Young, Matteo Pasquali
We
study how intrinsic parameters of carbon nanotube (CNT) samples
affect the properties of macroscopic CNT fibers with optimized structure.
We measure CNT diameter, number of walls, aspect ratio, graphitic
character, and purity (residual catalyst and non-CNT carbon) in samples
from 19 suppliers; we process the highest quality CNT samples into
aligned, densely packed fibers, by using an established wet-spinning
solution process. We find that fiber properties are mainly controlled
by CNT aspect ratio and that sample purity is important for effective
spinning. Properties appear largely unaffected by CNT diameter, number
of walls, and graphitic character (determined by Raman G/D ratio)
as long as the fibers comprise thin few-walled CNTs with high G/D
ratio (above ∼20). We show that both strength and conductivity
can be improved simultaneously by assembling high aspect ratio CNTs,
producing continuous CNT fibers with an average tensile strength of
2.4 GPa and a room temperature electrical conductivity of 8.5 MS/m,
∼2 times higher than the highest reported literature value
(∼15% of copper’s value), obtained without postspinning
doping. This understanding of the relationship of intrinsic CNT parameters
to macroscopic fiber properties is key to guiding CNT synthesis and
continued improvement of fiber properties, paving the way for CNT
fiber introduction in large-scale aerospace, consumer electronics,
and textile applications.