(Invited) Progress Towards a Novel Technology for Non-Contact Strain Measurements Based on SWCNT Fluorescence Spectroscopy — Sergei M. Bachilo (2015) | RDL Network
(Invited) Progress Towards a Novel Technology for Non-Contact Strain Measurements Based on SWCNT Fluorescence Spectroscopy
Article 2015 en
Authors
SB
Sergei M. Bachilo
PS
Peng Sun
JZ
Jackie Zhao
Abstract
1 min read
One of the most distinctive properties of semiconducting single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNT) is their emission of structure-specific fluorescence (band gap photoluminescence) in the short-wave infrared (SWIR) spectral region. The fluorescence peak from each ( n , m ) structural species shifts in wavelength as the nanotube’s band gap is altered by axial strain. These shifts are known from theory and experiment to depend on the nanotube’s chiral angle and on its mod ( n-m ,3) value, and they are linear with strain for realistic axial deformations. We have previously shown that this effect may lead to a new strain measurement technology (called S 4 , for strain-sensing smart skin) in which individualized SWCNTs embedded in a polymeric film serve as strain sensors and readout is achieved by non-contact optical methods. 1 Recent research progress aimed at enabling such an implementation will be described. Focus areas include processing and dispersing SWCNTs for effective use in S 4 ; comparing suitability of different polymer formulations as S 4 hosts; applying and stabilizing the S 4 films; understanding factors that influence interfacial adhesion between SWCNTs and host molecules; miniaturizing the optical hardware to allow excitation and capture of SWCNT fluorescence spectra with hand-held devices; refinement of data analysis methods for deducing strains from spectral data; tests of sensitivity and reproducibility for S 4 measurements with plastic, aluminum, and steel substrates; and construction of two-dimensional strain maps from sets of single-point measurements. 1 P. A. Withey, V. S. M. Vemuru, S. M. Bachilo, S. Nagarajaiah, and R. B. Weisman, Nano Lett. 12 , 3497 (2012).
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