Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients
Abstract Elegant design principles in biological materials such as stiffness gradients or sophisticated interfaces provide ingenious solutions for an efficient improvement of their mechanical properties. When materials such as wood are directly used in high‐performance applications, it is not possib...
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doaj-07fa899d88f54b678edce81c483199152020-11-24T21:21:36ZengWileyAdvanced Science2198-38442019-05-01610n/an/a10.1002/advs.201802190Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical GradientsMarion Frey0Giulia Biffi1Maria Adobes‐Vidal2Meri Zirkelbach3Yaru Wang4Kunkun Tu5Ann M. Hirt6Kunal Masania7Ingo Burgert8Tobias Keplinger9Wood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandInstitute for Geophysics Department of Earth Sciences ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandComplex Materials Department of Materials ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandWood Materials Science Department of Civil, Environmental and Geomatic Engineering ETH Zürich 8093 Zürich SwitzerlandAbstract Elegant design principles in biological materials such as stiffness gradients or sophisticated interfaces provide ingenious solutions for an efficient improvement of their mechanical properties. When materials such as wood are directly used in high‐performance applications, it is not possible to entirely profit from these optimizations because stiffness alterations and fiber alignment of the natural material are not designed for the desired application. In this work, wood is turned into a versatile engineering material by incorporating mechanical gradients and by locally adapting the fiber alignment, using a shaping mechanism enabled by reversible interlocks between wood cells. Delignification of the renewable resource wood, a subsequent topographic stacking of the cellulosic scaffolds, and a final densification allow fabrication of desired 3D shapes with tunable fiber architecture. Additionally, prior functionalization of the cellulose scaffolds allows for obtaining tunable functionality combined with mechanical gradients. Locally controllable elastic moduli between 5 and 35 GPa are obtained, inspired by the ability of trees to tailor their macro‐ and micro‐structure. The versatility of this approach has significant relevance in the emerging field of high‐performance materials from renewable resources.https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.201802190delignificationmechanical gradientsnatural fiber compositesreversible mechanical interlockingshapeable wood |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Marion Frey Giulia Biffi Maria Adobes‐Vidal Meri Zirkelbach Yaru Wang Kunkun Tu Ann M. Hirt Kunal Masania Ingo Burgert Tobias Keplinger |
spellingShingle |
Marion Frey Giulia Biffi Maria Adobes‐Vidal Meri Zirkelbach Yaru Wang Kunkun Tu Ann M. Hirt Kunal Masania Ingo Burgert Tobias Keplinger Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients Advanced Science delignification mechanical gradients natural fiber composites reversible mechanical interlocking shapeable wood |
author_facet |
Marion Frey Giulia Biffi Maria Adobes‐Vidal Meri Zirkelbach Yaru Wang Kunkun Tu Ann M. Hirt Kunal Masania Ingo Burgert Tobias Keplinger |
author_sort |
Marion Frey |
title |
Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients |
title_short |
Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients |
title_full |
Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients |
title_fullStr |
Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients |
title_full_unstemmed |
Tunable Wood by Reversible Interlocking and Bioinspired Mechanical Gradients |
title_sort |
tunable wood by reversible interlocking and bioinspired mechanical gradients |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Advanced Science |
issn |
2198-3844 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
Abstract Elegant design principles in biological materials such as stiffness gradients or sophisticated interfaces provide ingenious solutions for an efficient improvement of their mechanical properties. When materials such as wood are directly used in high‐performance applications, it is not possible to entirely profit from these optimizations because stiffness alterations and fiber alignment of the natural material are not designed for the desired application. In this work, wood is turned into a versatile engineering material by incorporating mechanical gradients and by locally adapting the fiber alignment, using a shaping mechanism enabled by reversible interlocks between wood cells. Delignification of the renewable resource wood, a subsequent topographic stacking of the cellulosic scaffolds, and a final densification allow fabrication of desired 3D shapes with tunable fiber architecture. Additionally, prior functionalization of the cellulose scaffolds allows for obtaining tunable functionality combined with mechanical gradients. Locally controllable elastic moduli between 5 and 35 GPa are obtained, inspired by the ability of trees to tailor their macro‐ and micro‐structure. The versatility of this approach has significant relevance in the emerging field of high‐performance materials from renewable resources. |
topic |
delignification mechanical gradients natural fiber composites reversible mechanical interlocking shapeable wood |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/advs.201802190 |
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