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Download fileFiber with Butterfly Wings: Creating Colored Carbon Fibers with Increased Strength, Adhesion, and Reversible Malleability
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posted on 2019-10-25, 12:05 authored by Daniel
J. Eyckens, Chantelle L. Arnold, James D. Randall, Filip Stojcevski, Andreas Hendlmeier, Melissa K. Stanfield, Jean Pinson, Thomas R. Gengenbach, Richard Alexander, Lachlan C. Soulsby, Paul S. Francis, Luke C. HendersonColored
and color-changing materials are central to perception and interaction
in nature and have been exploited in an array of modern technologies
such as sensors, visual displays, and smart materials. Attempts to
introduce color into carbon fiber materials have been limited by deleterious
impacts on fiber properties, and the extension of colored fibers toward
“smart composites” remains in its infancy. We present
carbon fibers incorporating structural color, similar to that observed
on the surface of soap bubbles and various insects and birds, by modifying
the fiber surface through in situ polymerization grafting. When dry,
the treated fibers exhibit a striking blue color, but when exposed
to a volatile solvent, a cascade of colors across the visible light
region is observed as the film first swells and then shrinks as the
solvent evaporates. The treated fibers not only possess a unique color
and color-changing ability but also can be reversibly formed into
complex shapes and bear significant loads even without being encased
in a supporting polymer. The tensile strength of treated fibers shows
a statistically significant increase (+12%), and evaluation of the
fiber-to-matrix adhesion of these polymers to an epoxy resin shows
more than 300% improvement over control fibers. This approach creates
a new platform for the multifaceted advance of smart composites.