Affiliation:
1. Department of Electro‐Mechanical Systems Engineering Korea University Sejong 30019 Republic of Korea
2. Radioisotope Research Division Korea Atomic Energy Research Institute 111, Daedeok‐daero Yuseong‐gu Daejeon 34 057 Republic of Korea
3. Department of Mechanical Engineering Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology 291, Daehak‐ro Yuseong‐gu Daejeon 34 141 Republic of Korea
4. Department of Materials Science & Engineering Korea Advanced Institute of Science and Technology 291, Daehak‐ro Yuseong‐gu Daejeon 34 141 Republic of Korea
5. Department of Nano‐manufacturing Technology Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials 156, Gajeongbuk‐ro, Yuseong‐gu Daejeon 34103 Republic of Korea
Abstract
AbstractNanomaterial‐based yarns have been actively developed owing to their advantageous features, namely, high surface‐area‐to‐volume ratios, flexibility, and unusual material characteristics such as anisotropy in electrical/thermal conductivity. The superior properties of the nanomaterials can be directly imparted and scaled‐up to macro‐sized structures. However, most nanomaterial‐based yarns have thus far, been fabricated with only organic materials such as polymers, graphene, and carbon nanotubes. This paper presents a novel fabrication method for fully inorganic nanoribbon yarn, expanding its applicability by bundling highly aligned and suspended nanoribbons made from various inorganic materials (e.g., Au, Pd, Ni, Al, Pt, WO3, SnO2, NiO, In2O3, and CuO). The process involves depositing the target inorganic material on a nanoline mold, followed by suspension through plasma etching of the nanoline mold, and twisting using a custom‐built yarning machine. Nanoribbon yarn structures of various functional inorganic materials are utilized for chemical sensors (Pd‐based H2 and metal oxides (MOx)‐based green gas sensors) and green energy transducers (water splitting electrodes/triboelectric nanogenerators). This method is expected to provide a comprehensive fabrication strategy for versatile inorganic nanomaterials‐based yarns.
Funder
Korea Institute of Machinery and Materials
Ministry of Trade, Industry and Energy
National Research Foundation of Korea
Korean National Police Agency
Ministry of Education
Cited by
1 articles.
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