Researchers report the fabrication of materials consisting of nanoscale carbon beam lattices, using a combination of 3D printing and high-temperature pyrolysis; the process yielded narrower beams than the resolution limits of conventional 3D printing, and the resulting materials were lighter than water, could be made virtually insensitive to fabrication-induced defects, and were stronger relative to their density than any existing microarchitected or nanoarchitected materials, with strengths approaching the theoretical limit.
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Article #18-17309: "Lightweight, flaw-tolerant, and ultrastrong nanoarchitected carbon," by Xuan Zhang, Andrey Vyatskikh, Huajian Gao, Julia R. Greer, and Xiaoyan Li.
MEDIA CONTACT: Xiaoyan Li, Tsinghua University, Beijing, CHINA; tel: +86-10-62789491, +86-15510206923; e-mail: xiaoyanlithu@tsinghua.edu.cn
Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences