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Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

2015

Polymer

Articles 1 - 7 of 7

Full-Text Articles in Engineering

Stretchable, Weavable Coiled Carbon Nanotube/Mno2/Polymer Fiber Solid-State Supercapacitors, Changsoon Choi, Shi Hyeong Kim, Hyeon Jun Sim, Jae Ah Lee, A Young Choi, Youn Tae Kim, Xavier Lepro, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim Jan 2015

Stretchable, Weavable Coiled Carbon Nanotube/Mno2/Polymer Fiber Solid-State Supercapacitors, Changsoon Choi, Shi Hyeong Kim, Hyeon Jun Sim, Jae Ah Lee, A Young Choi, Youn Tae Kim, Xavier Lepro, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Fiber and yarn supercapacitors that are elastomerically deformable without performance loss are sought for such applications as power sources for wearable electronics, micro-devices, and implantable medical devices. Previously reported yarn and fiber supercapacitors are expensive to fabricate, difficult to upscale, or non-stretchable, which limits possible use. The elastomeric electrodes of the present solid-state supercapacitors are made by using giant inserted twist to coil a nylon sewing thread that is helically wrapped with a carbon nanotube sheet, and then electrochemically depositing pseudocapacitive MnO2 nanofibers. These solid-state supercapacitors decrease capacitance by less than 15% when reversibly stretched by 150% in the …


A Bio-Friendly, Green Route To Processable, Biocompatible Graphene/Polymer Composites, Eoin Murray, Sepidar Sayyar, Brianna C. Thompson, Robert A. Gorkin Iii, David L. Officer, Gordon G. Wallace Jan 2015

A Bio-Friendly, Green Route To Processable, Biocompatible Graphene/Polymer Composites, Eoin Murray, Sepidar Sayyar, Brianna C. Thompson, Robert A. Gorkin Iii, David L. Officer, Gordon G. Wallace

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Grapene-based polymer composites are a very promising class of compounds for tissue engineering scaffolds. However, in general the methods of synthesis are environmentally hazardous and residual toxic materials can affect the biocompatibility significantly. In this paper a simple, scalable, environmentally-friendly, microwave-assisted synthesis is described that results in conducting graphene/polycaprolactone composites that retain the processability and biocompatibility of the pristine polymer without introducing possibly hazardous reducing agents. Composites of polycaprolactone and graphene oxide were synthesised in a single step by the ring-opening polymerisation of ε-caprolactone in the presence of dispersed graphene oxide nanosheets under microwave irradiation. The graphene oxide provides a …


Bio-Interface Of Conducting Polymer-Based Materials For Neuroregeneration, Bo Weng, Jianglin Diao, Qun Xu, Yuqing Liu, Changming Li, Ailing Ding, Jun Chen Jan 2015

Bio-Interface Of Conducting Polymer-Based Materials For Neuroregeneration, Bo Weng, Jianglin Diao, Qun Xu, Yuqing Liu, Changming Li, Ailing Ding, Jun Chen

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Nerve system diseases like Parkinson's disease, Huntington's disease, Alzheimer's disease, etc. seriously affect thousands of patients' lives every year, making them suffer from pains and inconvenience. Recently, bio-interfaces between neural cells/tissues and polymer based biomaterials attracted worldwide attention due to the ability of polymer based biomaterials to serve as nerve conduits, drug carriers and neurites guidance platform in neuroregeneration. The role that bio-interface played and the way it interacted with neural tissues and cells have been thoroughly investigated by the researchers. In this paper we mainly focus on reviewing the bio-interface between nerve tissues/cells and advanced functional biocompatible polymers, such …


Harvesting Temperature Fluctuations As Electrical Energy Using Torsional And Tensile Polymer Muscles, Shi Hyeong Kim, Marcio Dias Lima, Mikhail E. Kozlov, Carter S. Haines, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Shazed Aziz, Changsoon Choi, Hyeon Jun Sim, Xuemin Wang, Hongbing Lu, Dong Qian, John D. W Madden, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim Jan 2015

Harvesting Temperature Fluctuations As Electrical Energy Using Torsional And Tensile Polymer Muscles, Shi Hyeong Kim, Marcio Dias Lima, Mikhail E. Kozlov, Carter S. Haines, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Shazed Aziz, Changsoon Choi, Hyeon Jun Sim, Xuemin Wang, Hongbing Lu, Dong Qian, John D. W Madden, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Diverse means have been deployed for harvesting electrical energy from mechanical actuation produced by low-grade waste heat, but cycle rate, energy-per-cycle, device size and weight, or cost have limited applications. We report the electromagnetic harvesting of thermal energy as electrical energy using thermally powered torsional and tensile artificial muscles made from inexpensive polymer fibers used for fishing line and sewing thread. We show that a coiled 27 μm-diameter nylon muscle fiber can be driven by 16.7 °C air temperature fluctuations to spin a magnetic rotor to a peak torsional rotation speed of 70 000 rpm for over 300 000 heating-cooling …


Harvesting Temperature Fluctuations As Electrical Energy Using Torsional And Tensile Polymer Muscles, Shi Hyeong Kim, Marcio Dias Lima, Mikhail E. Kozlov, Carter S. Haines, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Shazed Aziz, Changsoon Choi, Hyeon Jun Sim, Xuemin Wang, Hongbing Lu, Dong Qian, John D. W Madden, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim Jan 2015

Harvesting Temperature Fluctuations As Electrical Energy Using Torsional And Tensile Polymer Muscles, Shi Hyeong Kim, Marcio Dias Lima, Mikhail E. Kozlov, Carter S. Haines, Geoffrey M. Spinks, Shazed Aziz, Changsoon Choi, Hyeon Jun Sim, Xuemin Wang, Hongbing Lu, Dong Qian, John D. W Madden, Ray H. Baughman, Seon Jeong Kim

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Diverse means have been deployed for harvesting electrical energy from mechanical actuation produced by low-grade waste heat, but cycle rate, energy-per-cycle, device size and weight, or cost have limited applications. We report the electromagnetic harvesting of thermal energy as electrical energy using thermally powered torsional and tensile artificial muscles made from inexpensive polymer fibers used for fishing line and sewing thread. We show that a coiled 27 μm-diameter nylon muscle fiber can be driven by 16.7 °C air temperature fluctuations to spin a magnetic rotor to a peak torsional rotation speed of 70 000 rpm for over 300 000 heating-cooling …


Electrical Stimulation Using Conductive Polymer Polypyrrole Promotes Differentiation Of Human Neural Stem Cells: A Biocompatible Platform For Translational Neural Tissue Engineering, Elise Stewart, Nao R. Kobayashi, Michael J. Higgins, Anita Quigley, Sina S. Jamali, Simon Moulton, Robert M. I Kapsa, Gordon G. Wallace, Jeremy M. Crook Jan 2015

Electrical Stimulation Using Conductive Polymer Polypyrrole Promotes Differentiation Of Human Neural Stem Cells: A Biocompatible Platform For Translational Neural Tissue Engineering, Elise Stewart, Nao R. Kobayashi, Michael J. Higgins, Anita Quigley, Sina S. Jamali, Simon Moulton, Robert M. I Kapsa, Gordon G. Wallace, Jeremy M. Crook

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

Conductive polymers (CPs) are organic materials that hold great promise for biomedicine. Potential applications include in vitro or implantable electrodes for excitable cell recording and stimulation, and conductive scaffolds for cell support and tissue engineering. Here we demonstrate the utility of electroactive CP Polypyrrole (PPy) containing the anionic dopant dodecylbenzenesulfonate (DBS) to differentiate novel clinically relevant human neural stem cells (hNSCs). Electrical stimulation of PPy(DBS) induced hNSCs to predominantly β-III Tubulin (Tuj1) expressing neurons, with lower induction of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) expressing glial cells. In addition, stimulated cultures comprised nodes or clusters of neurons with longer neurites and …


Influence Of Biopolymer Loading On The Physiochemical And Electrochemical Properties Of Inherently Conducting Polymer Biomaterials, Paul J. Molino, Peter C. Innis, Michael J. Higgins, Robert M. I Kapsa, Gordon G. Wallace Jan 2015

Influence Of Biopolymer Loading On The Physiochemical And Electrochemical Properties Of Inherently Conducting Polymer Biomaterials, Paul J. Molino, Peter C. Innis, Michael J. Higgins, Robert M. I Kapsa, Gordon G. Wallace

Australian Institute for Innovative Materials - Papers

The physicochemical and electrochemical properties of polypyrrole (PPy) doped with the biological dopant dextran sulphate (DS) were shown to be significantly altered as a function of varying the salt concentration (0.2, 2 or 20 mg/ml) in the polymerisation electrolyte. Films grown in the presence of 0.2 mg/ml DS generated the highest potential during galvanostatic growth, with the potential decreasing with each subsequent increase in DS concentration. The electroactivity of the polymers was similar for all three DS concentrations, with the 20 mg/ml film drawing slightly more current upon reduction in PBS. Increasing the DS concentration reduced film interfacial roughness and …