posted on 2023-09-14, 13:04authored bySuellen Pereira Espíndola, Jure Zlopasa, Stephen J. Picken
High-performance
bioinspired materials have shown rapid
development
over the last decade. Examples are brick-and-mortar hierarchical structures,
which are often achieved via solvent evaporation. Although good properties
are claimed, most systems are composed of stacked or intercalated
platelets. Exfoliation is a crucial step to give ultimate anisotropic
properties, e.g., thermal, mechanical, and barrier
properties. We propose a general framework for all the various types
of micro-scale structures that should be distinguished for 2D filler
nanocomposites. In particular, the exfoliated state is systematically
explored by the immobilization of montmorillonite platelets via (gelatin)
hydrogelation. Scattering techniques were used to evaluate this strategy
at the level of the particle dispersion and the regularity of spatial
arrangement. The gelatin/montmorillonite exfoliated nanostructures
are fully controlled by the filler volume fraction since the observed
gallery d-spacings perfectly fall onto the predicted
values. Surprisingly, X-ray analysis also revealed short- and quasi
long-range arrangement of the montmorillonite clay at high loading.