4.8 Article

Controlled fragmentation of multimaterial fibres and films via polymer cold-drawing

期刊

NATURE
卷 534, 期 7608, 页码 529-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/nature17980

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资金

  1. US Air Force Office of Scientific Research (AFOSR) [FA-9550-12-1-0148]
  2. AFOSR MURI [FA9550-14-1-0037]
  3. US National Science Foundation [CMMI-1300773]
  4. MIT MRSEC through the MRSEC Program of the National Science Foundation [DMR-1419807]

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Polymer cold-drawing(1-4) is a process in which tensile stress reduces the diameter of a drawn fibre (or thickness of a drawn film) and orients the polymeric chains. Cold-drawing has long been used in industrial applications(5-7), including the production of flexible fibres with high tensile strength such as polyester and nylon(8,9). However, cold-drawing of a composite structure has been less studied. Here we show that in a multimaterial fibre(10,11) composed of a brittle core embedded in a ductile polymer cladding, cold-drawing results in a surprising phenomenon: controllable and sequential fragmentation of the core to produce uniformly sized rods along metres of fibre, rather than the expected random or chaotic fragmentation. These embedded structures arise from mechanical-geometric instabilities associated with 'neck' propagation(2,3). Embedded, structured multimaterial threads with complex transverse geometry are thus fragmented into a periodic train of rods held stationary in the polymer cladding. These rods can then be easily extracted via selective dissolution of the cladding, or can self-heal by thermal restoration to re-form the brittle thread. Our method is also applicable to composites with flat rather than cylindrical geometries, in which case cold-drawing leads to the break-up of an embedded or coated brittle film into narrow parallel strips that are aligned normally to the drawing axis. A range of materials was explored to establish the universality of this effect, including silicon, germanium, gold, glasses, silk, polystyrene, biodegradable polymers and ice. We observe, and verify through nonlinear finite-element simulations, a linear relationship between the smallest transverse scale and the longitudinal break-up period. These results may lead to the development of dynamical and thermoreversible camouflaging via a nanoscale Venetian-blind effect, and the fabrication of large-area structured surfaces that facilitate high-sensitivity bio-detection.

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