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Continuous MXene fibers with near-gigapascal tensile strength via radial confinement and axial stretching

  • Chaojie Huang
  • , Ying Chen
  • , Tengyuan Zhang
  • , Enlai Gao
  • , Yongheng Wang
  • , Guo Xia
  • , Mingshan Li
  • , Wangwei Lian
  • , Xuliang Deng
  • , Sijie Wan*
  • , Qunfeng Cheng*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • University of Science and Technology of China
  • Beihang University
  • Peking University
  • Wuhan University
  • University of Shanghai for Science and Technology

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Assembling titanium carbide MXene nanosheets into macroscopic high-performance fibers is very challenging because of the voids caused by transverse wrinkles, hindering their practical applications in wearable smart textiles. Here we continuously fabricate ultrastrong MXene fibers by coaxial-wet-spinning-assisted radial confining integrated with roll-to-roll-assisted axial stretching under near room temperature. Wet-spun MXene fibers are bridged with calcium ions and radially confined to reduce the voids resulting from transverse wrinkles by an in-situ bridged sodium alginate encapsulation layer, followed by stretching to axially align nanosheets. The resultant MXene fibers provide record tensile strength (958 MPa) and electrical conductivity (13,692 S cm-1). Large-area textiles made from the MXene fibers present extraordinary electromagnetic interference shielding capacity (6,509 dB cm-1). The proposed strategy opens an avenue for scalable assembling other two-dimensional nanosheets into high-performance fibers.

Original languageEnglish
Article number1277
JournalNature Communications
Volume17
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2026

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