logo
Loading...
Woven organic crystals
ChemistryNature Communications

Woven organic crystals

L. Lan, L. Li, et al.

Discover the innovative world of woven architectures crafted from elastic, high aspect ratio organic crystals by Linfeng Lan and colleagues. This groundbreaking study reveals how two-dimensional woven networks enhance strength and resilience while defying the limitations of traditional organic crystal growth, paving the way for exciting applications.... show more
Abstract
Woven architectures are prepared by physical entanglement of fibrous components to expand one-dimensional material into two-dimensional sheets with enhanced strength and resilience to wear. Here, we capitalize on the elastic properties of long organic crystals with a high aspect ratio to prepare an array of centimeter-size woven network structures. While being robust to mechanical impact, the woven patches are also elastic due to effective stress dissipation by the elasticity of the individual warp and weft crystals. The thermal stability of component crystals translates into favorable thermoelastic properties of the porous woven structures, where the network remains elastic over a range of 300 K. By providing means for physical entanglement of organic crystals, the weaving circumvents the natural limitation of the small size of slender organic crystals that is determined by their natural growth, thereby expanding the prospects for applications of organic crystals from one-dimensional entities to expandable, two-dimensional robust structures.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
Nov 21, 2023
Authors
Linfeng Lan, Liang Li, Jianqun Qi, Xiuhong Pan, Qi Di, Panče Naumov, Hongyu Zhang
Tags
woven architecturesorganic crystalsstress dissipationthermally stabletwo-dimensional networksenhanced strengthelastic materials
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 22+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny