Microscale 3D Printing and Tuning of Cellulose Nanocrystals Reinforced Polymer Nanocomposites |
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Authors: | Alexander Groetsch Samuel Stelzl Yannick Nagel Tatiana Kochetkova Nadim C. Scherrer Aleksandr Ovsianikov Johann Michler Laszlo Pethö Gilberto Siqueira Gustav Nyström Jakob Schwiedrzik |
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Affiliation: | 1. Laboratory for Mechanics of Materials and Nanostructures Department of Advanced Materials and Surfaces, Empa - Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Feuerwerkerstrasse 39, Thun, 3602 Switzerland;2. Research Group 3D Printing and Biofabrication Institute of Materials Science and Technology, TU Wien, Getreidemarkt 9, Vienna, 1060 Austria;3. Laboratory for Cellulose & Wood Materials, Empa - Swiss Federal Laboratories for Materials Science and Technology, Ueberlandstrasse 129, Dübendorf, 8600 Switzerland;4. Bern University of Applied Sciences, HKB, Bern, 3027 Switzerland |
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Abstract: | The increasing demand for functional materials and an efficient use of sustainable resources makes the search for new material systems an ever growing endeavor. With this respect, architected (meta-)materials attract considerable interest. Their fabrication at the micro- and nanoscale, however, remains a challenge, especially for composites with highly different phases and unmodified reinforcement fillers. This study demonstrates that it is possible to create a non-cytotoxic nanocomposite ink reinforced by a sustainable phase, cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs), to print and tune complex 3D architectures using two-photon polymerization, thus, advancing the state of knowledge toward the microscale. Micro-compression, high-res scanning electron microscopy, (polarised) Raman spectroscopy, and composite modeling are used to study the structure-property relationships. A 100% stiffness increase is observed already at 4.5 wt% CNC while reaching a high photo-polymerization degree of ≈80% for both neat polymers and CNC-composites. Polarized Raman and the Halpin–Tsai composite-model suggest a random CNC orientation within the polymer matrix. The microscale approach can be used to tune arbitrary small scale CNC-reinforced polymer-composites with comparable feature sizes. The new insights pave the way for future applications where the 3D printing of small structures is essential to improve performances of tissue-scaffolds, extend bio-electronics applications or tailor microscale energy-absorption devices. |
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Keywords: | cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) degree of conversion Halpin–Tsai composite model micromechanics microscale 3D printing (two-photon polymerization) reinforced polymer nanocomposites sustainable reinforcements |
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