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Dive into the research topics where Pranjal Nautiyal is active.

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Featured researches published by Pranjal Nautiyal.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Oxidative Unzipping and Transformation of High Aspect Ratio Boron Nitride Nanotubes into “White Graphene Oxide” Platelets

Pranjal Nautiyal; Archana Loganathan; Richa Agrawal; Benjamin Boesl; Chunlei Wang; Arvind Agarwal

Morphological and chemical transformations in boron nitride nanotubes under high temperature atmospheric conditions is probed in this study. We report atmospheric oxygen induced cleavage of boron nitride nanotubes at temperatures exceeding 750 °C for the first time. Unzipping is then followed by coalescence of these densely clustered multiple uncurled ribbons to form stacks of 2D sheets. FTIR and EDS analysis suggest these 2D platelets to be Boron Nitride Oxide platelets, with analogous structure to Graphene Oxide, and therefore we term them as “White Graphene Oxide” (WGO). However, not all BNNTs deteriorate even at temperatures as high as 1000 °C. This leads to the formation of a hybrid nanomaterial system comprising of 1D BN nanotubes and 2D BN oxide platelets, potentially having advanced high temperature sensing, radiation shielding, mechanical strengthening, electron emission and thermal management applications due to synergistic improvement of multi-plane transport and mechanical properties. This is the first report on transformation of BNNT bundles to a continuous array of White Graphene Oxide nanoplatelet stacks.


Small | 2017

Harnessing Three Dimensional Anatomy of Graphene Foam to Induce Superior Damping in Hierarchical Polyimide Nanostructures

Pranjal Nautiyal; Benjamin Boesl; Arvind Agarwal

Graphene foam-based hierarchical polyimide composites with nanoengineered interface are fabricated in this study. Damping behavior of graphene foam is probed for the first time. Multiscale mechanisms contribute to highly impressive damping in graphene foam. Rippling, spring-like interlayer van der Waals interactions and flexing of graphene foam branches are believed to be responsible for damping at the intrinsic, interlayer and anatomical scales, respectively. Merely 1.5 wt% graphene foam addition to the polyimide matrix leads to as high as ≈300% improvement in loss tangent. Graphene nanoplatelets are employed to improve polymer-foam interfacial adhesion by arresting polymer shrinkage during imidization and π-π interactions between nanoplatelets and foam walls. As a result, damping behavior is further improved due to effective stress transfer from the polymer matrix to the foam. Thermo-oxidative stability of these nanocomposites is investigated by exposing the specimens to glass transition temperature of the polyimide (≈400 °C). The composites are found to retain their damping characteristics even after being subjected to such extreme temperature, attesting their suitability in high temperature structural applications. Their unique hierarchical nanostructure provides colossal opportunity to engineer and program material properties.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Three-Dimensional Graphene Foam Induces Multifunctionality in Epoxy Nanocomposites by Simultaneous Improvement in Mechanical, Thermal, and Electrical Properties

Leslie Embrey; Pranjal Nautiyal; Archana Loganathan; Adeyinka Idowu; Benjamin Boesl; Arvind Agarwal

Three-dimensional (3D) macroporous graphene foam based multifunctional epoxy composites are developed in this study. Facile dip-coating and mold-casting techniques are employed to engineer microstructures with tailorable thermal, mechanical, and electrical properties. These processing techniques allow capillarity-induced equilibrium filling of graphene foam branches, creating epoxy/graphene interfaces with minimal separation. Addition of 2 wt % graphene foam enhances the glass transition temperature of epoxy from 106 to 162 °C, improving the thermal stability of the polymer composite. Graphene foam aids in load-bearing, increasing the ultimate tensile strength by 12% by merely 0.13 wt % graphene foam in an epoxy matrix. Digital image correlation (DIC) analysis revealed that the graphene foam cells restrict and confine the deformation of the polymer matrix, thereby enhancing the load-bearing capability of the composite. Addition of 0.6 wt % graphene foam also enhances the flexural strength of the pure epoxy by 10%. A 3D network of graphene branches is found to suppress and deflect the cracks, arresting mechanical failure. Dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA) of the composites demonstrated their vibration damping capability, as the loss tangent (tan δ) jumps from 0.1 for the pure epoxy to 0.24 for ∼2 wt % graphene foam-epoxy composite. Graphene foam branches also provide seamless pathways for electron transfer, which induces electrical conductivity exceeding 450 S/m in an otherwise insulator epoxy matrix. The epoxy-graphene foam composite exhibits a gauge factor as high as 4.1, which is twice the typical gauge factor for the most common metals. Simultaneous improvement in thermal, mechanical, and electrical properties of epoxy due to 3D graphene foam makes epoxy-graphene foam composite a promising lightweight and multifunctional material for aiding load-bearing, electrical transport, and motion sensing in aerospace, automotive, robotics, and smart device structures.


Advanced Healthcare Materials | 2018

The Role of Nanomechanics in Healthcare

Pranjal Nautiyal; Fahad Alam; Kantesh Balani; Arvind Agarwal

Nanomechanics has played a vital role in pushing our capability to detect, probe, and manipulate the biological species, such as proteins, cells, and tissues, paving way to a deeper knowledge and superior strategies for healthcare. Nanomechanical characterization techniques, such as atomic force microscopy, nanoindentation, nanotribology, optical tweezers, and other hybrid techniques have been utilized to understand the mechanics and kinetics of biospecies. Investigation of the mechanics of cells and tissues has provided critical information about mechanical characteristics of host body environments. This information has been utilized for developing biomimetic materials and structures for tissue engineering and artificial implants. This review summarizes nanomechanical characterization techniques and their potential applications in healthcare research. The principles and examples of label-free detection of cancers and myocardial infarction by nanomechanical cantilevers are discussed. The vital importance of nanomechanics in regenerative medicine is highlighted from the perspective of material selection and design for developing biocompatible scaffolds. This review interconnects the advancements made in fundamental materials science research and biomedical technology, and therefore provides scientific insight that is of common interest to the researchers working in different disciplines of healthcare science and technology.


Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2015

A comparative study of indentation induced creep in pure magnesium and AZ61 alloy

Pranjal Nautiyal; Jayant Jain; Arvind Agarwal


Materials Science and Engineering A-structural Materials Properties Microstructure and Processing | 2016

Influence of loading path and precipitates on indentation creep behavior of wrought Mg–6 wt% Al–1 wt% Zn magnesium alloy

Pranjal Nautiyal; Jayant Jain; Arvind Agarwal


Advanced Engineering Materials | 2016

Directionally Aligned Ultra‐Long Boron Nitride Nanotube Induced Strengthening of Aluminum‐Based Sandwich Composite

Pranjal Nautiyal; Chris Rudolf; Archana Loganathan; Cheng Zhang; Benjamin Boesl; Arvind Agarwal


Journal of Magnetism and Magnetic Materials | 2015

Sol–gel synthesis of Fe–Co nanoparticles and magnetization study

Pranjal Nautiyal; Md. Motin Seikh; Oleg I. Lebedev; Asish K. Kundu


Carbon | 2018

The mechanics of energy dissipation in a three-dimensional graphene foam with macroporous architecture

Pranjal Nautiyal; Benjamin Boesl; Arvind Agarwal


Acta Materialia | 2017

Reactive wetting and filling of boron nitride nanotubes by molten aluminum during equilibrium solidification

Pranjal Nautiyal; Ankur Gupta; Sudipta Seal; Benjamin Boesl; Arvind Agarwal

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Arvind Agarwal

Florida International University

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Benjamin Boesl

Florida International University

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Archana Loganathan

Florida International University

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Cheng Zhang

Florida International University

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Jayant Jain

Indian Institute of Technology Delhi

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Chris Rudolf

Florida International University

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Leslie Embrey

Florida International University

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Adeyinka Idowu

Florida International University

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Ankur Gupta

University of Central Florida

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