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Spiral Honeycomb Microstructured Bacterial Cellulose for Increased Strength and Toughness
Author(s) -
Kui Yu,
Srikkanth Balasubramanian,
H. Pahlavani,
Mohammad J. Mirzaali,
Amir A. Zadpoor,
MarieEve AubinTam
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs applied materials and interfaces
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.535
H-Index - 228
eISSN - 1944-8252
pISSN - 1944-8244
DOI - 10.1021/acsami.0c15886
Subject(s) - materials science , toughness , cellulose , honeycomb , composite material , bacterial cellulose , spiral (railway) , honeycomb structure , chemical engineering , mechanical engineering , engineering
Natural materials, such as nacre and silk, exhibit both high strength and toughness due to their hierarchical structures highly organized at the nano-, micro-, and macroscales. Bacterial cellulose (BC) presents a hierarchical fibril structure at the nanoscale. At the microscale, however, BC nanofibers are distributed randomly. Here, BC self-assembles into a highly organized spiral honeycomb microstructure giving rise to a high tensile strength (315 MPa) and a high toughness value (17.8 MJ m -3 ), with pull-out and de-spiral morphologies observed during failure. Both experiments and finite-element simulations indicate improved mechanical properties resulting from the honeycomb structure. The mild fabrication process consists of an in situ fermentation step utilizing poly(vinyl alcohol), followed by a post-treatment including freezing-thawing and boiling. This simple self-assembly production process is highly scalable, does not require any toxic chemicals, and enables the fabrication of light, strong, and tough hierarchical composite materials with tunable shape and size.

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