April 7 - 11, 2025
Seattle, Washington
Symposium Supporters
2025 MRS Spring Meeting & Exhibit
SF07.06.03

Graph Models of Biomimetic Composites from Nanofibers

When and Where

Apr 10, 2025
9:15am - 9:30am
Summit, Level 3, Room 346

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

Nicholas Kotov1

University of Michigan1

Abstract

Nicholas Kotov1

University of Michigan1
High-performance resource-conscious composites represent the critical bottleneck in many modern technologies. Following the blueprints from Nature, these uniquely capable materials can be made from nearly all nanomaterials, based, for instance on cellulose nanocrystals (CELL), metal nanowires (NWs) and recycled aramid nanofibers (ANFs). However, all of them always contain a superposition of order and disorder that can also be cumulatively described as material’s complexity. Performance and complexity are inherently intertwined because repeatable structural patterns at different scales must be synergistically integrated to obtain tunable combinations of application-specific properties. While being nonrandom, the structural patterns with large degree of stochasticity make it difficult to describe these complex materials using methodologies developed for crystals, quasicrystals, and glasses.

Recently we showed that structural patterns of high-performance nanocomposites can be accurately described, purposefully designed, and scalably reproduced using graph theory (GT), which is equally applicable to biological tissues and their technological replicas. Graphs, i.e. sets of nodes and edges, are able to capture both ordered and disordered components of high-performance composites. GT descriptors and image-informed graph models can quantify the structural pattern with both short- and long-range regularities. The fundamental significance of GT models as ‘chemical formulas’ of nanostructures and their practical utility in the materials design will be demonstrated by cartilage-like composites based on ANFs for different types of batteries supercapacitors and implantable biomaterials. The graph-property relations will be demonstrated based on CELL, ANF and NW composites,

References:
Kotov, N.A.; Dékány, I.; Fendler, J.H. Ultrathin graphite oxide–polyelectrolyte composites prepared by self-assembly: Transition between conductive and non-conductive states Adv. Mater. 1996, 8, 637;

Jiang, W.; Emergence of Complexity in Hierarchically Organized Chiral Particles; Science, 2020, 368, 6491, 642;

X. Mao, N. Kotov, Complexity, disorder, and functionality of nanoscale materials, MRS Bulletin, 2024, Volume 49, 352.

Keywords

microscale

Symposium Organizers

Nicholas Kotov, University of Michigan
Molly Stevens, Imperial College London
Samuel Chigome, Botswana Institute
Paul Bogdan, University of Southern California

Session Chairs

Yee Kan Koh

In this Session