One form of boron nitride is a white, lubricious, flaky material whose material properties resemble graphite’s. By contrast, its nanotube form, like carbon’s, is strong, tough, and light. Exploiting those desirable properties in a bulk material entails embedding the nanotubes in a lightweight matrix—provided the nanotubes bind strongly enough to the matrix material that they don’t slip. Quantifying that binding was the goal of an investigation led by Changhong Ke of Binghamton University and Xianqiao Wang of the University of Georgia. The researchers created thin polymer films—of epoxy and of PMMA—and embedded them with boron nitride nanotubes (BNNTs). Cleaving the films left some BNNTs poking out from the surface. By welding a nanotube’s protruding tip to an atomic force microscope, the team could determine how much force was needed to pull it out. For tubes buried deeper than about 200 nm, the force turned out to be 250 nN for...
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1 March 2016
March 01 2016
Citation
Charles Day; Boron nitride nanotubes reinforce polymer materials. Physics Today 1 March 2016; 69 (3): 20. https://doi.org/10.1063/PT.3.3098
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