posted on 2017-04-26, 00:00authored byBeate Reiser, Dominik Gerstner, Lola Gonzalez-Garcia, Johannes H. M. Maurer, Ioannis Kanelidis, Tobias Kraus
Hierarchical
structures lend strength to natural fibers made of
soft nanoscale building blocks. Intermolecular interactions connect
the components at different levels of hierarchy, distribute stresses,
and guarantee structural integrity under load. Here, we show that
synthetic ultrathin gold nanowires with interacting ligand shells
can be spun into biomimetic, free-standing microfibers. A solution
spinning process first aligns the wires, then lets their ligand shells
interact, and finally converts them into a hierarchical superstructure.
The resulting fiber contained 80 vol % organic ligand but was strong
enough to be removed from the solution, dried, and mechanically tested.
Fiber strength depended on the wire monomer alignment. Shear in the
extrusion nozzle was systematically changed to obtain process–structure–property
relations. The degree of nanowire alignment changed breaking stresses
by a factor of 1.25 and the elongation at break by a factor of 2.75.
Plasma annealing of the fiber to form a solid metal shell decreased
the breaking stress by 65%.