Traditionally, energy‐intensive and time‐consuming postmechanical disintegration processes are inevitable in extracting biopolymer nanofibrils from natural materials and thereby hinder their practical applications. Herein, a new, convenient, scalable, and energy‐efficient method for exfoliating nanofibrils (ChNFs) from various chitin sources via pseudosolvent‐assisted intercalation process is proposed. These self‐exfoliated ChNFs possess controllable thickness from 2.2 to 0.8 nm, average diameter of 4–5 nm, high aspect ratio up to 103 and customized surface chemistries. Particularly, compared with elementary nanofibrils, ChNFs with few molecular layers thick exhibit greater potential to construct high‐performance structural materials, e.g., ductile nanopapers with large elongation up to 70.1% and toughness as high as 30.2 MJ m−3, as well as soft hydrogels with typical nonlinear elasticity mimicking that of human‐skin. The proposed self‐exfoliation concept with unique advantages in the combination of high yield, energy efficiency, scalable productivity, less equipment requirements, and mild conditions opens up a door to extract biopolymer nanofibrils on an industrial scale. Moreover, the present modular ChNFs exfoliation will facilitate researchers to study the effect of thickness on the properties of nanofibrils and provide more insight into the structure–function relationship of biopolymer‐based materials.
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