The present invention relates in general to a composite membrane comprising a fibrous fabric impregnated with a liquid wetting it. The present invention also relates to the production of such a membrane.
It is known to those skilled in the art that composite materials make it possible to cover a vast range of mechanical, thermal and optical properties which cannot be produced with a single type of material. In the context of composite materials combining several materials in the solid state, mention may in particular be made of reinforced concrete, which has the high compressive strength of concrete, but also a tensile strength by virtue of the metal rods structuring the reinforced concrete (thus constituting its reinforcement).
Other composite materials can combine a liquid phase and a solid phase in order to take advantage of their respective properties. A hollow tube filled with a small amount of liquid (oil for example) will provide excellent thermal conductivity without electrical conductivity, the tube ensuring the structural integrity of this composite material. No simple solid material can achieve this type of performance.
In addition to the combination of these two phases of different natures, solid-liquid interactions can also considerably affect the mechanical properties of a composite material. For example, spider silk consists of fibers of filamentous proteins composed of hydrophilic and hydrophobic block copolymers and water, which become even more wet when the hygrometry is high (typically greater than 70%) or when the silk is suddenly wetted. By virtue of the elasto-capillary coiling of the fibers, spider capture silk shows an unexpected liquid behavior in compression (it remains tensioned all along the shortening of its end-to-end length), but remains solid in extension (then showing an elastic behavior).
The applicant has used the behavior of this one-dimensional solid-liquid object constituted by capillary spider silk as inspiration to develop a two-dimensional solid-liquid composite membrane having the same property as capillary spider silk.
More particularly, the applicant has developed a composite membrane comprising a fibrous fabric of nanofibers, the thickness of the fabric being between 10 nm and 50 km, the fabric being impregnated with a wetting liquid A.
According to the invention, the composite membrane is immersed in a second fluid B which is immiscible with the wetting liquid A, forming an A/B interface between the wetting liquid A and said immiscible fluid B, and the composite membrane is capable of remaining tensioned:
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “composite membrane” is intended to mean a membrane comprising a solid reinforcement (or fabric) and a liquid impregnating the reinforcement while wetting it.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “tensioned membrane” is intended to mean a membrane which is in a state of mechanical tension.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “miscible fluids” is intended to mean fluids A and B which form only a single phase and there is no surface tension at the A/B interface. Conversely, when fluids A and B are not miscible, they form two distinct phases, with a non-zero surface tension at the A/B interface.
In the fibrous fabric of the membrane according to the invention, the nanofibers are arranged in the form of a mat comprising between 1 and 20 layers of nanofibers.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “nanofibers” is intended to mean fibers having a diameter of between 10 nm and 5 μm, and typically of about 200 nm.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “liquid which wets the tissue” is intended to mean a liquid which exhibits an angle of contact of less than 90° with a flat surface of the material making up the nanofibers of the fabric.
Advantageously, the A/B interface formed by the wetting liquid A and the immiscible fluid B can be an oil/air interface, an oil/water interface, or a glycerol/air interface, or an interface of water with surfactant/air. The A/B interface is stable over time (that is to say over the period of time in which the composite membrane is used) since the liquid A which impregnates the fibrous mat does not diffuse into the fluid B. The A/B interface is present on both sides of the composite membrane.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “surfactant” (or “detergent”) is intended to mean a substance which, even used in a low amount, significantly modifies the surface tension of the fluid containing it, for example of water when the detergent used is dissolved soap. In this case, if the composite membrane according to the invention impregnated with soapy water is brought into contact with air, the A/B interface is an interface of soapy water/air type.
The composite membrane according to the invention can adjust its surface and its shape so as to always remain under tension regardless of the nature of the mechanical stress to which it is subjected, in the same way as a simple soapy liquid film, without ever breaking, by virtue of its solid nature. For that, the fibrous mat folds spontaneously within the liquid layer with which it is soaked when the edges of the composite membrane are moved closer together. The surface tension developed by the A/B interface allows the membrane to remain tensioned even when it is compressed, as opposed to a dry membrane which would sag under its weight. In other words, the membrane according to the invention has the property of remaining in a tensioned state regardless of the nature of the mechanical stress of the membrane:
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “compression ratio” is intended to mean the ratio between the distance between the ends of a characteristic dimension of the fabric, under the effect of a compressive mechanical strain, and this distance in the resting state.
The thickness of the fabric can be advantageously between 500 nm and 30 μm, and preferably between 1 μm and 5 μm.
The nanofibers of the fabric can advantageously have a diameter between 100 nm and 500 nm, and preferably of about 200 nm.
Thus, it can be used in multiple applications, and in particular as artificial muscle, or for constituting a stretchable electronic circuit, or also as a smart power circuit, or also as a SLIPS (“Slippery Liquid-Infused Porous Surfaces”) membrane.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “artificial muscle” is intended to mean an organ capable of developing a mechanical force in reaction to an exterior stimulus.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “smart power circuit” is intended to mean a circuit of which the electrical behavior depends on the mechanical strain imposed on the membrane.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “SLIPS membrane” is intended to mean a membrane impregnated with a wetting liquid A. When brought into contact with an immiscible liquid B, the surface of the membrane impregnated with the liquid A is slippery for the liquid B.
A subject of the present invention is also a process for manufacturing a composite membrane according to the invention by electrically assisted extrusion, comprising the following steps:
said process being characterized in that it also comprises, at the end of step F, an additional step G of wetting the fibrous fabric with a wetting liquid A, so as to form a wetted membrane; and
in that it comprises a step of immersing the wetted membrane thus obtained in a fluid B which is immiscible with the wetting liquid A, so as to create an A/B interface between the wetting liquid A and the immiscible fluid B and thus to form the composite membrane according to the invention.
The composite membrane, the fibrous fabric and the nanofibers, which constitute it, the wetting liquid A and the fluid B which is immiscible with the liquid A (and consequently the A/B interface) are as defined above.
Thus, the A/B interface obtained following the immersion of the wetted membrane in the fluid B may advantageously be an oil/air interface, an oil/water interface, or a glycerol/air interface, or an interface of water with surfactant or detergent/air, for example of the soapy water type.
For the purposes of the present invention, the term “material” is intended to mean the matter constituting the nanofibers of the fibrous fabric.
Advantageously, a parchment paper, for example the parchment paper sold by the store Monoprix® under the trade name PAPIER CUISSON 8 METRES, is used as non-stick coating.
Advantageously, the surface of the target which is oriented toward the cylinder is a flat face located at a distance L from the outlet (3a) of the capillary tube (3) of between 5 cm and 15 cm, the capillary tube being subjected to an electrical voltage U of between 10 kV and 15 kV.
Preferably, this flat surface of the target is located at a distance L from the outlet (3a) of the capillary tube (3) which is about 10 cm, the capillary tube being subjected to an electrical voltage U of about 12 kV.
Advantageously, the constituent material of the fabric may be a polymer material chosen from the group consisting of the following polymers:
In addition to the abovementioned polymer materials, a polymer-inorganic network hybrid material, wherein the inorganic network may be, for example, SiO2 (silica), TiO2 (titanium dioxide), Fe2O3(iron oxide), in the form of an amorphous network or of crystallized nanoparticles, may also be advantageous.
Other advantages and particularities of the present invention will result from the following description, given by way of nonlimiting example and produced with reference to the examples and to the appended figures:
The technical characteristics common to these figures are each denoted by the same numerical reference in the figures in question.
Schematically represented in
Photograph D of
Photograph E of
On photographs D and E of
Photograph F of
| Number | Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1751950 | Mar 2017 | FR | national |
| Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
|---|---|---|---|
| PCT/FR2018/050557 | 3/9/2018 | WO | 00 |