Spinning Regenerated Silk Fibers with Improved Toughness by Plasticizing with Low Molecular Weight Silk
Article 2020 en
Authors
YY
Ya Yao
BA
Benjamin J. Allardyce
RR
Rangam Rajkhowa
Abstract
1 min read
Low-molecular weight (LMW) silk was utilized as a LMW silk plasticizer for regenerated silk, generating weak physical crosslinks between high-molecular weight (HMW) silk chains in the amorphous regions of a mixed solution of HMW/LMW silk. The plasticization effect of LMW silk was investigated using mechanical testing, Raman spectroscopy, and wide-angle X-ray scattering (WAXS). Small amounts (10%) of LMW silk resulted in a 19.4% enhancement in fiber extensibility and 37.8% increase in toughness. The addition of the LMW silk facilitated the movement of HMW silk chains during drawing, resulting in an increase in molecular chain orientation when compared with silk spun from 100% HMW silk solution. The best regenerated silk fibers produced in this work had an orientation factor of 0.94 and crystallinity of 47.82%, close to the values of natural degummed<i>Bombyx mori</i> silk fiber. The approach and mechanism elucidated here can facilitate artificial silk systems with enhanced properties.
Ya Yao, Benjamin J. Allardyce, Rangam Rajkhowa, Dylan Hegh, Si Qin, Ken Aldren S. Usman, Pablo Mota‐Santiago, Jizhen Zhang, Peter A. Lynch, Xungai Wang, David Kaplan, Joselito M. Razal
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