Carbon nanotube dry adhesives with temperature-enhanced adhesion over a large temperature range

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Abstract

Conventional adhesives show a decrease in the adhesion force with increasing temperature due to thermally induced viscoelastic thinning and/or structural decomposition. Here, we report the counter-intuitive behaviour of carbon nanotube (CNT) dry adhesives that show a temperature-enhanced adhesion strength by over six-fold up to 143 N cm â -2 (4 mm × 4 mm), among the strongest pure CNT dry adhesives, over a temperature range from â -196 to 1,000 °C. This unusual adhesion behaviour leads to temperature-enhanced electrical and thermal transports, enabling the CNT dry adhesive for efficient electrical and thermal management when being used as a conductive double-sided sticky tape. With its intrinsic thermal stability, our CNT adhesive sustains many temperature transition cycles over a wide operation temperature range. We discover that a 'nano-interlock' adhesion mechanism is responsible for the adhesion behaviour, which could be applied to the development of various dry CNT adhesives with novel features.

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Xu, M., Du, F., Ganguli, S., Roy, A., & Dai, L. (2016). Carbon nanotube dry adhesives with temperature-enhanced adhesion over a large temperature range. Nature Communications, 7. https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms13450

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