材料科学
织物
纳米纤维
纤维素
复合材料
经济短缺
韧性
工程木材
合成纤维
纤维
化学工程
语言学
工程类
哲学
政府(语言学)
作者
Chao Jia,Chaoji Chen,Yudi Kuang,Kun Fu,Yilin Wang,Yonggang Yao,Spencer Kronthal,Emily Hitz,Jianwei Song,Fujun Xu,Boyang Liu,Liangbing Hu
标识
DOI:10.1002/adma.201801347
摘要
Abstract Advanced textiles made of macroscopic fibers are usually prepared from synthetic fibers, which have changed lives over the past century. The shortage of petrochemical resources, however, greatly limits the development of the textile industry. Here, a facile top‐down approach for fabricating macroscopic wood fibers for textile applications (wood‐textile fibers) comprising aligned cellulose nanofibers directly from natural wood via delignification and subsequent twisting is demonstrated. Inherently aligned cellulose nanofibers are well retained, while the microchannels in the delignified wood are squeezed and totally removed by twisting, resulting in a dense structure with approximately two times higher mechanical strength (106.5 vs 54.9 MPa) and ≈20 times higher toughness (7.70 vs 0.36 MJ m −3 ) than natural wood. Dramatically different from natural wood, which is brittle in nature, the resultant wood‐textile fibers are highly flexible and bendable, likely due to the twisted structures. The wood‐textile fibers also exhibit excellent knitting properties and dyeability, which are critical for textile applications. Furthermore, functional wood‐textile fibers can be achieved by preinfiltrating functional materials in the delignified wood film before twisting. This top‐down approach of fabricating aligned macrofibers is simple, scalable, and cost‐effective, representing a promising direction for the development of smart textiles and wearable electronics.
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