Date20th, May 2019

Summary:

Conductive and compressible carbon aerogels are useful in a variety of applications. In recent decades, carbon aerogels have been widely explored by using graphitic carbons and soft carbons, which show advantages in superelasticity. These elastic aerogels usually have delicate microstructures with good fatigue resistance but ultralow strength. Hard carbons demonstrate great advantages in mechanical strength and structural stability due to the sp3 C-induced turbostratic "house-of-cards" structure. However, stiffness and fragility clearly get in the way of achieving superelasticity with hard carbons. Up to now, it has been a challenge to fabricate superelastic hard carbon-based aerogels.

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spider web Dew on a spider's web in the morning. Credit: Wikipedia/Luc Viatour/Lucnix.be

Conductive and compressible carbon aerogels are useful in a variety of applications. In recent decades, carbon aerogels have been widely explored by using graphitic carbons and soft carbons, which show advantages in superelasticity. These elastic aerogels usually have delicate microstructures with good fatigue resistance but ultralow strength. Hard carbons demonstrate great advantages in mechanical strength and structural stability due to the sp3 C-induced turbostratic "house-of-cards" structure. However, stiffness and fragility clearly get in the way of achieving superelasticity with hard carbons. Up to now, it has been a challenge to fabricate superelastic hard carbon-based aerogels.

Recently, inspired by the flexibility and rigidity of natural spider silks, a research team led by Shu-Hong Yu from the University of Science and Technology of China developed a simple method to fabricate superelastic and fatigue resistant hard with nanofibrous network structure by using resorcinol-formaldehyde resin as a hard carbon source. This work was published in Advanced Materials. entitled "Superelastic hard carbon nanofiber aerogels."

They report their process thus: The polymerization of resin monomers was initiated in the presence of nanofibers as structural templates to prepare a hydrogel with nanofibrous networks, followed by drying and pyrolysis to produce hard carbon aerogel. During polymerization, the monomers are deposited on templates and weld the fiber-fiber joints, leaving a random network structure with massive robust joints. Moreover, (such as diameters of nanofiber, densities of aerogels, and ) can be controlled by simply tuning templates and the amount of raw materials.

Due to the hard carbon nanofibers and abundant welded joints among the nanofibers, the hard carbon aerogels display robust and stable mechanical performance, including super-elasticity, high strength, extremely fast recovery speed (860 mm s-1) and a ow energy loss coefficient (

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