4.6 Article

Tension-induced toughening and conductivity enhancement in sequentially bridged MXene fibers

Journal

2D MATERIALS
Volume 9, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

IOP Publishing Ltd
DOI: 10.1088/2053-1583/ac8c51

Keywords

MXenes; wet spinning; SAXS; WAXS; mechanical strengthening; structural alignment

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [IH140100018, FT130100380, DP180100094]
  2. Deakin University (Alfred Deakin Postdoctoral Research Fellowship Scheme)

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Tough, conductive, and electrochemically active fibers were fabricated through a sequential bridging strategy involving calcium cation (Ca2+) infiltration of cellulose nanocrystal (CNC)-bridged MXene. These fibers exhibited excellent physical and electrochemical properties, and surpassed the conductivity of their unaligned MXene counterpart.
Ti3C2T (x) MXene is a promising active material for developing fiber-based devices due to its exceptional electrical conductivity and electrochemical capacitance. However, fabricating robust fibers with high MXene content remains challenging due to shortcomings such as low interfacial adhesion between sheets and shrinkage-induced sheet disorientation during processing, leading to diminished physical and electrochemical properties. Here, we demonstrate the fabrication of tough, conductive, and electrochemically active fibers through a sequential bridging strategy involving calcium cation (Ca2+) infiltration of cellulose nanocrystal (CNC)-bridged MXene, cross-linked and dried under tension. The resulting fibers exhibited a record toughness of similar to 2.05 MJ m(-3) and retained high volumetric capacitance (similar to 985 F cm(-3)), attributed to the synergistic CNC bridging, Ca2+ cross-linking, and tension application during fiber drying. These fibers also surpass the conductivity of their unaligned pristine MXene counterpart (similar to 8347 S cm(-1) vs similar to 5078 S cm(-1)), ascribed to the tension-induced improvement in MXene alignment within these fibers, mitigating the undesirable effects of inserting an insulating CNC bridge. We anticipate that improving the toughness and conductivity of sequentially bridged MXene fibers will pave the way for the production of robust multifunctional MXene fibers, allowing their use in practical high-performance applications like wearable electronics and energy storage devices.

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