Ultrahigh strength, modulus, and conductivity of graphitic fibers by macromolecular coalescence.
Dongju LeeSeo Gyun KimSeungki HongCristina MadronaYuna OhMin ParkNatsumi KomatsuLauren W TaylorBongjin ChungJungwon KimJun Yeon HwangJaesang YuDong Su LeeHyeon Su JeongNam Ho YouNam Dong KimDae-Yoon KimHeon Sang LeeKun-Hong LeeJunichiro KonoGeoff WehmeyerMatteo PasqualiJuan Jose VilatelaSeongwoo RyuBon-Cheol KuPublished in: Science advances (2022)
Theoretical considerations suggest that the strength of carbon nanotube (CNT) fibers be exceptional; however, their mechanical performance values are much lower than the theoretical values. To achieve macroscopic fibers with ultrahigh performance, we developed a method to form multidimensional nanostructures by coalescence of individual nanotubes. The highly aligned wet-spun fibers of single- or double-walled nanotube bundles were graphitized to induce nanotube collapse and multi-inner walled structures. These advanced nanostructures formed a network of interconnected, close-packed graphitic domains. Their near-perfect alignment and high longitudinal crystallinity that increased the shear strength between CNTs while retaining notable flexibility. The resulting fibers have an exceptional combination of high tensile strength (6.57 GPa), modulus (629 GPa), thermal conductivity (482 W/m·K), and electrical conductivity (2.2 MS/m), thereby overcoming the limits associated with conventional synthetic fibers.