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ABSTRACT Multifunctional fibers with high mechanical strength enable advanced applications of smart textiles, robotics, and biomedicine. Herein, we reported a one-step degumming method to fabricate strong, stiff, and humidity-responsive smart cellulosic fibers from abundant natural grass. The facile process involves partially removing lignin and hemicellulose functioning as glue in grass, which leads to the separation of vessels, parenchymal cells, and cellulosic fibers, where cellulosic fibers are manufactured at kilogram scale. The resulting fibers show dense and unidirectional fibril structure at both micro- and nano-scales, which demonstrate high tensile strength of ∼0.9 GPa and Young's modulus of 72 GPa, being 13- and 14-times higher than original grass. Inspired by stretchable plant tendrils, we developed a humidity-responsive actuator by engineering cellulosic fibers into the spring-like structures, presenting superior response rate and lifting capability. These strong and smart cellulosic fibers can be manufactured at large scale with low cost, representing promising a fiber material derived from renewable and sustainable biomass.more » « less
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Dumbbell- and bola-shaped amphiphiles are commonly expected to self-assemble into vesicles with condensed hydrophobic domains due to the dominant hydrophobic interaction. In this work, we examined the assemblies of the dumbbell-shaped AC60-AC60 amphiphile, with two carboxylic acid-functionalized fullerenes (AC60) polar head groups linked by an organic tether, and found that they assemble into hollow, spherical blackberry-type structures with porous surfaces, judged by their smaller assemblies in organic solvents with higher polarity and in aqueous solutions with high pH. We attribute the formation of blackberry structures to the organic tether that may be too short to fill up a condensed hydrophobic domain, as confirmed by all-atom simulations. This is further proved by noticing that several bola-type macromolecules with hydrophilic polyethylene glycol (PEG) chain being the linker and no hydrophobic components, AC60-PEG-AC60, can also self-assemble into hollow, spherical assemblies and demonstrate similar pH response as the assemblies from AC60-AC60 dumbbells. Therefore, we conclude that the driving force of the self-assembly for these dumbbell- or bola-shaped molecules is counterion-mediated attraction from the two AC60 head groups rather than the hydrophobic interaction due to the organic linkers. The so-formed blackberry structures here, as well-studied before in other systems, possess porous surfaces, making these charged amphiphiles a valuable model for designing stable nanocontainers with controllable porosity to the change of environment.more » « less
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Abstract Incorporating fluorescent quantum defects in the sidewalls of semiconducting single-wall carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) through chemical reaction is an emerging route to predictably modify nanotube electronic structures and develop advanced photonic functionality. Applications such as room-temperature single-photon emission and high-contrast bio-imaging have been advanced through aryl-functionalized SWCNTs, in which the binding configurations of the aryl group define the energies of the emitting states. However, the chemistry of binding with atomic precision at the single-bond level and tunable control over the binding configurations are yet to be achieved. Here, we explore recently reported photosynthetic protocol and find that it can control chemical binding configurations of quantum defects, which are often referred to as organic color centers, through the spin multiplicity of photoexcited intermediates. Specifically, photoexcited aromatics react with SWCNT sidewalls to undergo a singlet-state pathway in the presence of dissolved oxygen, leading to ortho binding configurations of the aryl group on the nanotube. In contrast, the oxygen-free photoreaction activates previously inaccessible para configurations through a triplet-state mechanism. These experimental results are corroborated by first principles simulations. Such spin-selective photochemistry diversifies SWCNT emission tunability by controlling the morphology of the emitting sites.more » « less
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Abstract Mixing multimetallic elements in hollow‐structured nanoparticles is a promising strategy for the synthesis of highly efficient and cost‐effective catalysts. However, the synthesis of multimetallic hollow nanoparticles is limited to two or three elements due to the difficulties in morphology control under the harsh alloying conditions. Herein, the rapid and continuous synthesis of hollow high‐entropy‐alloy (HEA) nanoparticles using a continuous “droplet‐to‐particle” method is reported. The formation of these hollow HEA nanoparticles is enabled through the decomposition of a gas‐blowing agent in which a large amount of gas is produced in situ to “puff” the droplet during heating, followed by decomposition of the metal salt precursors and nucleation/growth of multimetallic particles. The high active sites per mass ratio of such hollow HEA nanoparticles makes them promising candidates for energy and electrocatalysis applications. As a proof‐of‐concept, it is demonstrated that these materials can be applied as the cathode catalyst for Li–O2battery operations with a record‐high current density per catalyst mass loading of 2000 mA gcat.−1, as well as good stability and durable catalytic activity. This work offers a viable strategy for the continuous manufacturing of hollow HEA nanomaterials that can find broad applications in energy and catalysis.more » « less
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Abstract Self‐assembled nanostructures of rod‐like molecules are commonly limited to nematic or layered smectic structures dominated by the parallel arrangement of the rod‐like components. Distinct self‐assembly behavior of four categories of dendritic rods constructed by placing a tri(hydroxy) group at the apex of dendritic oligo‐fluorenes is observed. Designed hydrogen bonding and dendritic architecture break the parallel arrangement of the rods, resulting in molecules with specific (fan‐like or cone‐like) shapes. While the fan‐shaped molecules tend to form hexagonal packing cylindrical phases, the cone‐shaped molecules could form spherical motifs to pack into various ordered structures, including the Frank–Kasper A15 phase and dodecagonal quasicrystal. This study provides a model system to engineer diverse supramolecular structures by rod‐like molecules and sheds new light into the mechanisms of the formation of unconventional spherical packing structures in soft matter.more » « less