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research article

Structured nanoscale metallic glass fibres with extreme aspect ratios

Yan, Wei  
•
Richard, Ines  
•
Kurtuldu, Gueven
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August 3, 2020
Nature Nanotechnology

Micro- and nanoscale metallic glasses offer exciting opportunities for both fundamental research and applications in healthcare, micro-engineering, optics and electronics. The scientific and technological challenges associated with the fabrication and utilization of nanoscale metallic glasses, however, remain unresolved. Here, we present a simple and scalable approach for the fabrication of metallic glass fibres with nanoscale architectures based on their thermal co-drawing within a polymer matrix with matched rheological properties. Our method yields well-ordered and uniform metallic glasses with controllable feature sizes down to a few tens of nanometres, and aspect ratios greater than 10(10). We combine fluid dynamics and advanced in situ transmission electron microscopy analysis to elucidate the interplay between fluid instability and crystallization kinetics that determines the achievable feature sizes. Our approach yields complex fibre architectures that, combined with other functional materials, enable new advanced all-in-fibre devices. We demonstrate in particular an implantable metallic glass-based fibre probe tested in vivo for a stable brain-machine interface that paves the way towards innovative high-performance and multifunctional neuro-probes.

Metallic glasses possess intriguing functional properties, but controlled fabrication with nanoscale feature sizes remains challenging. Thermal co-drawing within a viscosity-matched polymer matrix enables the fabrication of uniform metallic glass fibres with feature sizes down to a few tens of nanometres, arbitrary transverse geometries and aspect ratios greater than 10(10).

  • Details
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Type
research article
DOI
10.1038/s41565-020-0747-9
Web of Science ID

WOS:000555383200003

Author(s)
Yan, Wei  
Richard, Ines  
Kurtuldu, Gueven
James, Nicholas D.  
Schiavone, Giuseppe  
Squair, Jordan W.  
Nguyen-Dang, Tung  
Das Gupta, Tapajyoti
Qu, Yunpeng  
Cao, Jake D.
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Date Issued

2020-08-03

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Published in
Nature Nanotechnology
Volume

15

Start page

875

End page

882

Subjects

Nanoscience & Nanotechnology

•

Materials Science, Multidisciplinary

•

Science & Technology - Other Topics

•

Materials Science

•

size-reduction

•

nanostructures

•

evolution

•

ductility

•

state

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
INE  
FIMAP  
LSBI  
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Available on Infoscience
August 9, 2020
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/170700
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