Uniformly aligned flexible magnetic films from bacterial nanocelluloses for fast actuating optical materials

Abstract

Naturally derived biopolymers have attracted great interest to construct photonic materials with multi-scale ordering, adaptive birefringence, chiral organization, actuation and robustness. Nevertheless, traditional processing commonly results in non-uniform organization across large-scale areas. Here, we report magnetically steerable uniform biophotonic organization of cellulose nanocrystals decorated with superparamagnetic nanoparticles with strong magnetic susceptibility, enabling transformation from helicoidal cholesteric (chiral nematic) to uniaxial nematic phase with near-perfect orientation order parameter of 0.98 across large areas. We demonstrate that magnetically triggered high shearing rate of circular flow exceeds those for conventional evaporation-based assembly by two orders of magnitude. This high rate shearing facilitates unconventional unidirectional orientation of nanocrystals along gradient magnetic field and untwisting helical organization. These translucent magnetic films are flexible, robust, and possess anisotropic birefringence and light scattering combined with relatively high optical transparency reaching 75%. Enhanced mechanical robustness and uniform organization facilitate fast, multimodal, and repeatable actuation in response to magnetic field, humidity variation, and light illumination.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Oct 03, 2022
Source ID
10.1038/s41467-022-33615-z

Entities

People

  • Chunhong Ye
  • Juan Yu
  • Katarina Adstedt
  • Minkyu Kim
  • Rui Xiong
  • Saewon Kang
  • Vladimir V. Tsukruk
  • Xiaofang Zhang
  • Xinran Chen
  • Xulin Zhao

Organizations

  • Air Force Research Laboratory Information Directorate
  • National Natural Science Foundation of China
  • National Science Foundation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Physics

Readers

  • Distributed Systems and Data Platform Development
  • Materials Science and Engineering.
  • Nanoscale Plasmonic Nanotechnology

Technology Areas

  • Biotechnology