Tetrapod Nanocrystals as Fluorescent Stress Probes of Electrospun Nanocomposites
Nano Letters 13(8): 3915-3922
Article 2013 English
Authors
SR
Shilpa N. Raja
AO
Andrew C. K. Olson
KT
Kari Thorkelsson
Abstract
1 min read
A nanoscale, visible-light, self-sensing stress probe would be highly desirable in a variety of biological, imaging, and materials engineering applications, especially a device that does not alter the mechanical properties of the material it seeks to probe. Here we present the CdSe–CdS tetrapod quantum dot, incorporated into polymer matrices via electrospinning, as an in situ luminescent stress probe for the mechanical properties of polymer fibers. The mechanooptical sensing performance is enhanced with increasing nanocrystal concentration while causing minimal change in the mechanical properties even up to 20 wt % incorporation. The tetrapod nanoprobe is elastic and recoverable and undergoes no permanent change in sensing ability even upon many cycles of loading to failure. Direct comparisons to side-by-side traditional mechanical tests further validate the tetrapod as a luminescent stress probe. The tetrapod fluorescence stress–strain curve shape matches well with uniaxial stress–strain curves measured mechanically at all filler concentrations reported.
Shilpa N. Raja, Danylo Zherebetskyy, Siva Wu, Peter Ercius, Alexander S. Powers, Andrew C. K. Olson, Daniel X. Du, Liwei Lin, Sanjay Govindjee, L.-W. Wang, Ting Xu, Paul Alivisatos, Robert O. Ritchie
Shilpa N. Raja, Andrew C. K. Olson, Kari Thorkelsson, Andrew J. Luong, Lillian Hsueh, Guoqing Chang, Bernd Gludovatz, Liwei Lin, Ting Xu, Robert O. Ritchie, Paul Alivisatos
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