Excellent fatigue resistance is a prerequisite for flexible energy devices to achieve high and stable performance under repeated deformation state. Inspired by the sophisticated interfacial architecture of nacre, herein a super fatigue‐resistant graphene‐based nanocomposite with integrated high tensile strength and toughness through poly(dopamine)‐nickel ion (Ni2+) chelate architecture that mimics byssal threads is demonstrated. These kind of synergistic interfacial interactions of covalent and ionic bonding effectively suppress the crack propagation in the process of fatigue testing, resulting in superhigh fatigue life of this bioinspired graphene‐based nanocomposite (BGBN). In addition, the electrical conductivity is well kept after fatigue testing. The proposed synergistic interfacial interactions could serve as a guideline for fabricating high‐performance multifunctional BGBNs with promising applications in flexible energy devices, such as flexible electrodes for supercapacitors and lithium batteries, etc.
Homogeneously mixing multiple metal elements within a single particle may offer new material property functionalities. High entropy alloys (HEAs), nominally defined as structures containing five or more well-mixed metal elements, are being explored at the nanoscale, but the scale-up to enable their industrial application is an extremely challenging problem. Here, we report an aerosol droplet-mediated technique toward scalable synthesis of HEA nanoparticles with atomic-level mixing of immiscible metal elements. An aqueous solution of metal salts is nebulized to generate ∼1 μm aerosol droplets, which when subjected to fast heating/quenching result in decomposition of the precursors and freezing-in of the zero-valent metal atoms. Atomic-level resolution scanning transmission electron microscopy coupled with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy analysis reveals that all metal elements in the nanoparticles are homogeneously mixed at the atomic level. We believe that this approach offers a facile and flexible aerosol droplet-mediated synthesis technique that will ultimately enable bulk processing starting from a particulate HEA.
Graphene composite films inspired by nacre are the subject of ongoing research efforts to optimize their properties for applications in flexible energy devices. Noncovalent interactions do not cause interruption of the delocalized conjugated π-electron system, thus preserving graphene's excellent properties. Herein, we synthesized a conjugated molecule with pyrene groups on both ends of a long linear chain (AP-DSS) from 1-aminopyrene (AP) and disuccinimidyl suberate (DSS). The AP-DSS molecules are used to cross-link adjacent graphene nanosheets via π-π interfacial interactions to improve properties of graphene films. The tensile strength and toughness of resultant graphene films were 4.1 and 6.4 times higher, respectively, than that of pure rGO film. More remarkably, the electrical conductivity showed a simultaneous improvement, which is rare to be achieved in other kinds of covalent or noncovalent functionalization. Such integration demonstrates the advantage of this work to previously reported noncovalent functionalization of graphene.
Magnesium nanoparticles (NPs) offer the potential of high-performance reactive materials from both thermodynamic and kinetic perspectives. However, the fundamental energy release mechanisms and kinetics have not been explored due to the lack of facile synthetic routes to high-purity Mg NPs. Here, a vapor-phase route to surface-pure, core−shell nanoscale Mg particles is presented, whereby controlled evaporation and growth are utilized to tune particle sizes (40−500 nm), and their size-dependent reactivity and energetic characteristics are evaluated. Extensive in situ characterizations shed light on the fundamental reaction mechanisms governing the energy release of Mg NP-based energetic composites across particle sizes and oxidizer chemistries. Direct observations from in situ transmission electron microscopy and high-speed temperature-jump/time-of-flight mass spectrometry coupled with ignition characterization reveal that the remarkably high reactivity of Mg NPs is a direct consequence of enhanced vaporization and Mg release from their high-energy surfaces that result in the accelerated energy release kinetics from their composites. Mg NP composites also demonstrate mitigated agglomeration and sintering during reaction due to rapid gasification, enabling complete energy extraction from their oxidation. This work expands the compositional possibilities of nanoscale solid fuels by highlighting the critical relationships between metal volatilization and oxidative energy release from Mg NPs, thus opening new opportunities for strategic design of functional Mg-based nanoenergetic materials for tunable energy release.
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