Abstract
Controllable synthesis of homochiral nano/micromaterials has been a constant challenge for fabricating various stimuli-responsive chiral sensors. To provide an avenue to this goal, we report electrospinning as a simple and economical strategy to form continuous homochiral microfibers with strain-sensitive chiroptical properties. First, electrospun homochiral microfibers from self-assembled cadmium sulfide (CdS) quantum dot magic-sized clusters (MSCs) are produced. Highly sensitive and reversible strain sensors are then fabricated by embedding these chiroptically active fibers into elastomeric films. The chiroptical response on stretching is indicated quantitatively as reversible changes in magnitude, spectral position (wavelength), and sign in circular dichroism (CD) and linear dichroism (LD) signals and qualitatively as a prominent change in the birefringence features under cross-polarizers. The observed periodic twisted helical fibrils at the surface of fibers provide insights into the origin of the fibers' chirality. The measurable shifts in CD and LD are caused by elastic deformations of these helical fibrillar structures of the fiber. To elucidate the origin of these chiroptical properties, we used field emission-electron microscopy (FE-SEM), atomic force microscopy (AFM), synchrotron X-ray analysis, polarized optical microscopy, as well as measurements to isolate the true CD, and contributions from photoelastic modulators (PEM) and LD. Our findings thus offer a promising strategy to fabricate chiroptical strain-sensing devices with multiple measurables/observables using electric-field-assisted spinning of homochiral nano/microfibers.
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