High Toughness Combined with High Strength in Oxide Ceramic Nanofibers.
Cheng LiuYalong LiaoWenling JiaoXiaohua ZhangNi WangJianyong YuYi-Tao LiuBin DingPublished in: Advanced materials (Deerfield Beach, Fla.) (2023)
Traditional oxide ceramics are inherently brittle and highly sensitive to defects, making them vulnerable to failure under external stress. As such, endowing these materials with high strength and high toughness simultaneously is crucial to improve their performance in most safety-critical applications. Fibrillation of the ceramic materials and further refinement of the fiber diameter, as realized by electrospinning, are expected to achieve the transformation from brittleness to flexibility owing to the structural uniqueness. Currently, the synthesis of electrospun oxide ceramic nanofibers must rely on an organic polymer template to regulate the spinnability of the inorganic sol, whose thermal decomposition during ceramization would inevitably lead to pore defects, and seriously weaken the mechanical properties of the final nanofibers. Here we propose a self-templated electrospinning strategy for the formation of oxide ceramic nanofibers without adding any organic polymer template. An example is given to show that individual silica nanofibers have an ideally homogeneous, dense, and defect-free structure, with tensile strength as high as 1.41 GPa and toughness up to 34.29 MJ m -3 , both of which are far superior to the counterparts prepared by polymer-templated electrospinning. This work provides a new strategy to develop oxide ceramic materials that are strong and tough. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.
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