Rapid Nanowelding of Carbon Coatings onto Glass Fibers by Electrothermal Shock

ACS Appl Mater Interfaces. 2020 Aug 19;12(33):37722-37731. doi: 10.1021/acsami.0c09549. Epub 2020 Aug 7.

Abstract

With the rapid development of nanomanufacturing, scaling up of nanomaterials requires advanced manufacturing technology to composite nanomaterials with disparate materials (ceramics, metals, and polymers) to achieve hybrid properties and coupling performances for practical applications. Attempts to assemble nanomaterials onto macroscopic materials are often accompanied by the loss of exceptional nanoscale properties during the fabrication process, which is mainly due to the poor contacts between carbon nanomaterials and macroscopic bulk materials. In this work, we proposed a novel cross-scale manufacturing concept to process disparate materials in different length scales and successfully demonstrated an electrothermal shock approach to process the nanoscale material (e.g., carbon nanotubes) and macroscale (e.g., glass fiber) with good bonding and excellent mechanical property for emerging applications. The excellent performance and potentially lower cost of the electrothermal shock technology offers a continuous, ultrafast, energy-efficient, and roll-to-roll process as a promising heating solution for cross-scale manufacturing.

Keywords: cross-scale manufacturing; electrothermal shock; high strength; materials across multiple length scales; nano- and macroscale.