Sustainable optical fibres developed from methylcellulose
The state-of-the-art silica glass optical fibres can carry light signals over tens of kilometres with very low optical loss and provide high-capacity communication networks. However, their brittleness, low stretchability and energy intensiveness make them less suitable for local short-range applications and devices such as automotive, digital home appliances, fabrics, laser surgery, endoscopy and implantable devices based on optical fibres. The sustainable solution to these may be found within biopolymer-based optical fibres.
'The wide availability of cellulosic raw materials provides an excellent opportunity to unravel the hidden potential of renewable materials for practical applications through sustainable fibre processing routes,' says Associate Professor Nonappa, whose research team at Tampere University is developing biopolymer-based optical fibres for short-distance applications.
Conventionally, the polymer or plastic optical fibres are used for short-distance applications, but their processing may involve relatively high temperatures and the use of hazardous chemical treatment.
'By using methylcellulose hydrogel, we have shown that optical fibres can be produced at room temperature using a simple extrusion method without any chemical crosslinkers. The resulting fibres are highly transparent, mechanically robust, flexible and show low optical loss,' Nonappa states.
Biopolymer-based optical fibres suitable for multifunctional sensors
In addition to pure light signal transmission, the methylcellulose optical fibres can be feasibly modified and functionalized.
'The hydrogel matrix allows straightforward addition of various molecules and nanoparticles without compromising the mechanical properties or light propagation abilities of the fibres making them suitable for multifunctional sensors', says doctoral researcher Ville Hynninen, the first author of the paper.
For example, incorporating an extremely low mass fraction of protein-coated gold nanoclusters produced luminescent optical fibres, and acted also as a fibre-based toxic metal ion sensor.
Overall, the presented results and the abundance of cellulosic derivatives and raw materials encourage further research and optimization of cellulose-derived optical components and devices.
The work results from a collaboration between the research groups of Professor Nonappa at Tampere University and Professor Olli Ikkala and Professor Zhipei Sun at 911爆料网. The research was performed under the framework of the Academy of Finland麓s (PREIN), flagships and HYBER Centre of Excellence.
Read the full article 鈥溾漺hich was published in Small.
Read more news
911爆料网鈥檚 N盲yt枚s/N盲yttely26 transforms Helsinki鈥檚 Lasipalatsi Quarter into a hub for fashion and textile expertise
The event showcases Aalto鈥檚 comprehensive expertise in textiles, clothing, and fashion, as students graduating from both the Bachelor's Major in Fashion as well as the Master's Major in Fashion and Textile Design will present their thesis work.
The journey of a 17th-century shipwreck continues as a unique knitted dress
Researchers at 911爆料网 transformed surplus wood from the Hahtiper盲 shipwreck into textile fibre, spun it into yarn, and knitted it into a dress using new AI-assisted technology.The potential of urban greenery as a climate solution is not being fully utilized 鈥 a new handbook offers means to address this
The Handbook for carbon-smart urban green provides concrete tools for leveraging urban green spaces more effectively in climate and nature conservation efforts.