This is actually amazing and unexpected. This can provide the scaffolding of hugely strong materials.
Graphene has been a complete material revolution all by itself and is now finding its way into industry.
Yet it is barely ten years old.
.
"Rebar graphene" foam supports 3,000 times its own weight
Michael Irving
http://newatlas.com/graphene-reinforced-carbon-nanotube-3000-times-weight/47895/?
Graphene
spends most of its time in a two-dimensional form, but that makes it
hard to make use of its long list of advantages, like its strength,
light weight, and electricity and heat conduction. MIT scientists
recently developed a 3D version
that's 10 times stronger than steel but a fraction of the density, and
now a team at Rice University has used carbon nanotubes to reinforce
graphene foam. The resulting 3D material can be molded into any shape
and supports 3,000 times its own weight before springing back to its
original height.
Named for the rebars
(reinforcing bars) commonly used to strengthen concrete, Rice's "rebar
graphene" is built around carbon nanotubes with several concentric
layers. In previous work the team had created three-dimensional graphene
foam, and having already used the nanotubes to reinforce regular old 2D
graphene, it made sense to combine the two.
"We developed graphene
foam, but it wasn't tough enough for the kind of applications we had in
mind, so using carbon nanotubes to reinforce it was a natural next
step," says James Tour, lead researcher on the study.
The team mixed the nanotubes in with a powdered nickel catalyst and
sugar to provide the carbon. Dried pellets of the substance were then
pressed in a steel die in the shape of a screw, and the carbon in the
sugar was turned into graphene through the process of chemical vapor deposition. Any remaining traces of nickel were removed, and the final result was a pure carbon, screw-shaped piece of graphene foam.
When viewed under an electron microscope, the researchers could see that the outer layers of the nanotubes had started to "unzip" and bonded with the graphene, which allowed the material to hold over 3,000 times its own weight without permanent damage. Even with a burden of 8,500 times its weight, the structure deformed permanently by only 25 percent. By comparison, graphene foam with no supporting nanotube structure began to struggle under a load of just 150 times its own weight.
While graphene foam can be formed into basically any shape, the researchers demonstrated that their creation worked as an electrode in a lithium-ion capacitor, and stayed mechanically and chemically stable.
The research was published in the journal ACS Applied Materials and Interfaces.
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