Litcius/Paper detail

Intermolecular self-assembly of dopamine-conjugated carboxymethylcellulose and carbon nanotubes toward supertough filaments and multifunctional wearables

Tianyu Guo, Zhangmin Wan, Dagang Li, Junlong Song, Orlando J. Rojas, Yongcan Jin

2021Chemical Engineering Journal26 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The utilization of smart textiles, mainly in the form of yarns and wovens, requires high structural toughness and flexibility. To this end, we introduce a strategy based on the intermolecular self-assembly of dopamine-conjugated carboxymethyl cellulose (DA-CMC) with carbon nanotubes (CNT). Upon coagulation in a nonsolvent, the DA-CMC/CNT suspensions readily form composite filaments by the effects of hydrogen bonding, H-pi, anion-pi, and pi-pi interactions, as demonstrated by molecular dynamic simulation. The DA-CMC/CNT filaments display super-toughness (~76.2 MJ m−3), extensibility (strain to failure of ~14.8% at 90% RH, twice that of dopamine-free analogous systems) and high electrical conductivity. Moreover, the composite filaments form conductive networks that effectively support bending, strain and compression in air or fluid media. As such, they are suitable for application in wearables devices designed for sensing and electrothermal heating. Our proposed, scalable synthesis of multifunctional filaments opens new opportunities given their electroactivity and suitability for human interfacing.

Topics & Concepts

Carbon nanotubeMaterials scienceComposite numberToughnessConjugated systemIntermolecular forceCarboxymethyl celluloseSelf-assemblyNanotechnologyComposite materialChemical engineeringPolymerChemistryMoleculeOrganic chemistrySodiumEngineeringMetallurgyAdvanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting MaterialsSupramolecular Self-Assembly in MaterialsAdvanced Materials and Mechanics