Super-elastic and fatigue resistant carbon material with lamellar multi-arch microstructure

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Abstract

Low-density compressible materials enable various applications but are often hindered by structure-derived fatigue failure, weak elasticity with slow recovery speed and large energy dissipation. Here we demonstrate a carbon material with microstructure-derived super-elasticity and high fatigue resistance achieved by designing a hierarchical lamellar architecture composed of thousands of microscale arches that serve as elastic units. The obtained monolithic carbon material can rebound a steel ball in spring-like fashion with fast recovery speed (1/4580 mm s'1), and demonstrates complete recovery and small energy dissipation (1/40.2) in each compress-release cycle, even under 90% strain. Particularly, the material can maintain structural integrity after more than 10 6 cycles at 20% strain and 2.5 × 10 5 cycles at 50% strain. This structural material, although constructed using an intrinsically brittle carbon constituent, is simultaneously super-elastic, highly compressible and fatigue resistant to a degree even greater than that of previously reported compressible foams mainly made from more robust constituents.

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Gao, H. L., Zhu, Y. B., Mao, L. B., Wang, F. C., Luo, X. S., Liu, Y. Y., … Yu, S. H. (2016). Super-elastic and fatigue resistant carbon material with lamellar multi-arch microstructure. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms12920

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