Advanced Science (Mar 2024)

Bamboo‐Inspired Crack‐Face Bridging Fiber Reinforced Composites Simultaneously Attain High Strength and Toughness

  • Hao Wang,
  • Zhangyu Wu,
  • Jie Tao,
  • Bin Wang,
  • Chaobin He

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.202308070
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 10
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract Biological strong and tough materials have been providing original structural designs for developing bioinspired high‐performance composites. However, new synergistic strengthening and toughening mechanisms from bioinspired structures remain yet to be explored and employed to upgrade current carbon material reinforced polymer composites, which are keystone to various modern industries. In this work, from bamboo, the featured cell face‐bridging fibers, are abstracted and embedded in a cellular network structure, and develop an epoxy resin/carbon composite featuring biomimetic architecture through a fabrication approach integrating freeze casting, carbonization, and resin infusion with carbon fibers (CFs) and carbon nanotubes (CNTs). Results show that this bamboo‐inspired crack‐face bridging fiber reinforced composite simultaneously possesses a high strength (430.8 MPa) and an impressive toughness (8.3 MPa m1/2), which surpass those of most resin‐based nanocomposites reported in the literature. Experiments and multiscale simulation models reveal novel synergistic strengthening and toughening mechanisms arising from the 2D faces that bridge the CFs: sustaining and transferring loads to enhance the overall load‐bearing ability and furthermore, incorporating CNTs pullout that resembles the intrinsic toughening at the molecular to nanoscale and strain delocalization, crack branching, and crack deflection as the extrinsic toughening at the microscale. These constitute a new effective and efficient strategy to develop simultaneously strong and tough composites through abstracting and implenting novel bioinspired structures, which contributes to addressing the long‐standingly challenging attainment of both high strength and toughness for advanced structural materials.

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