Ruilong Ma
Georgia Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Ruilong Ma.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Rui Xiong; Kesong Hu; Anise M. Grant; Ruilong Ma; Weinan Xu; Canhui Lu; Xinxing Zhang; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
Ultra-robust nanomembranes possessing high mechanical strength combined with excellent stiffness and toughness rarely achieved in nanocomposite materials are presented. These are fabricated by alternately depositing 1D cellulose nanocrystals and 2D graphene oxide nanosheets by using a spin assisted layer-by-layer assembly technique. Such a unique combination of 1D and 2D reinforcing nanostructures results in layered nanomaterials.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Kesong Hu; Rui Xiong; Hengyu Guo; Ruilong Ma; Shuaidi Zhang; Zhong Lin Wang; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
Power-generating flexible thin films for facile detection of biotactile events are fabricated from patterned metal-graphene oxide biopaper. These tactile materials are mechanically robust with a consistent output of 1 V and high response rate of 20 Hz. It is demonstrated that the simple quadruple electronic skin sensitively and selectively recognizes nine spatial biotactile positions and can readily be expanded.
Biomacromolecules | 2017
Sunghan Kim; Ren Geryak; Shuaidi Zhang; Ruilong Ma; Rossella Calabrese; David L. Kaplan; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
The interfacial shear strength between different layers in multilayered structures of layer-by-layer (LbL) microcapsules is a crucial mechanical property to ensure their robustness. In this work, we investigated the interfacial shear strength of modified silk fibroin ionomers utilized in LbL shells, an ionic-cationic pair with complementary ionic pairing, (SF)-poly-l-glutamic acid (Glu) and SF-poly-l-lysine (Lys), and a complementary pair with partially screened Coulombic interactions due to the presence of poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) segments and SF-Glu/SF-Lys[PEG] pair. Shearing and adhesive behavior between these silk ionomer surfaces in the swollen state were probed at different spatial scales and pressure ranges by using functionalized atomic force microscopy (AFM) tips as well as functionalized colloidal probes. The results show that both approaches were consistent in analyzing the interfacial shear strength of LbL silk ionomers at different spatial scales from a nanoscale to a fraction of a micron. Surprisingly, the interfacial shear strength between SF-Glu and SF-Lys[PEG] pair with partially screened ionic pairing was greater than the interfacial shear strength of the SF-Glu and SF-Lys pair with a high density of complementary ionic groups. The difference in interfacial shear strength and adhesive strength is suggested to be predominantly facilitated by the interlayer hydrogen bonding of complementary amino acids and overlap of highly swollen PEG segments.
Advanced Materials | 2016
Kesong Hu; Rui Xiong; Hengyu Guo; Ruilong Ma; Shuaidi Zhang; Zhong Lin Wang; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
On page 3549, V. V. Tsukruk and co-workers develop self-powered ultrathin flexible films for bio-tactile detection. Graphene oxide materials are engineered for robust self-powered tactile sensing applications harnessing their electrochemical reactivity. The simple quadruple electronic skin sensor can recognize nine spatial bio-tactile positions with high sensitivity and selectivity-an approach that can be expanded towards large-area flexible skin arrays.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018
Nikolay Borodinov; Dmitry Gil; Mykhailo Savchak; Christopher E. Gross; Nataraja Sekhar Yadavalli; Ruilong Ma; Vladimir V. Tsukruk; Sergiy Minko; Alexey Vertegel; Igor Luzinov
Surface modification with polymer grafting is a versatile tool for tuning the surface properties of a wide variety of materials. From a practical point of view, such a process should be readily scalable and transferable between different substrates and consist of as least number of steps as possible. To this end, a cross-linkable amphiphilic copolymer system that is able to bind covalently to surfaces and form permanently attached networks via a one-step procedure is reported here. This system consists of brushlike copolymers (molecular brushes) made of glycidyl methacrylate, poly(oligo(ethylene glycol) methyl ether methacrylate), and lauryl methacrylate, which provide the final product with tunable reactivity and balance between hydrophilicity and hydrophobicity. The detailed study of the copolymer synthesis and properties has been carried out to establish the most efficient pathway to design and tailor this amphiphilic molecular brush system for specific applications. As an example of the applications, we showed the ability to control the deposition of graphene oxide (GO) sheets on both hydrophilic and hydrophobic surfaces using GO modified with the molecular brushes. Also, the capability to tune the osteoblast cell adhesion with the copolymer-based coatings was demonstrated.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Marcus J. Smith; Sidney T. Malak; Jaehan Jung; Young Jun Yoon; Chun Hao Lin; Sunghan Kim; Kyungmin Lee; Ruilong Ma; Timothy J. White; Timothy J. Bunning; Zhiqun Lin; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
This work demonstrates a facile and versatile method for generating low scattering cross-linked quantum dot (QD)-polymer composite films and patterned highly emissive structures with ultrahigh QD loading, minimal phase separation, and tunable mechanical properties. Uniform QD-polymer films are fabricated using thiol-ene chemistry, in which cross-linked polymer networks are rapidly produced in ambient conditions via fast UV polymerization in bulk to suppress QD aggregation. UV-controlled thiol-ene chemistry limits phase separation through producing highly QD loaded cross-linked composites with loadings above majority of those reported in the literature (<1%) and approaching 30%. As the QD loading is increased, the thiol and ene conversion decreases, resulting in nanocomposites with widely variable and tailorable mechanical properties as a function of UV irradiation time with an elastic modulus decreasing to 1 GPa being characteristic of reinforced elastomeric materials, in contrast to usually observed stiff and brittle materials under these loading conditions. Furthermore, we demonstrate that the thiol-ene chemistry is compatible with soft-imprint lithography, making it possible to pattern highly loaded QD films while preserving the optical properties essential for high gain and low optical loss devices. The versatility of thiol-ene chemistry to produce high-dense QD-polymer films potentially makes it an important technique for polymer-based elastomeric optical metamaterials, where efficient light propagation is critical, like peculiar waveguides, sensors, and optical gain films.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Mykhailo Savchak; Nikolay Borodinov; Ruslan Burtovyy; Mark Anayee; Kesong Hu; Ruilong Ma; Anise M. Grant; Hongmei Li; Daniel Cutshall; Yimei Wen; Goutam Koley; William R. Harrell; George Chumanov; Vladimir V. Tsukruk; Igor Luzinov
Despite noteworthy progress in the fabrication of large-area graphene sheetlike nanomaterials, the vapor-based processing still requires sophisticated equipment and a multistage handling of the material. An alternative approach to manufacturing functional graphene-based films includes the employment of graphene oxide (GO) micrometer-scale sheets as precursors. However, search for a scalable manufacturing technique for the production of high-quality GO nanoscale films with high uniformity and high electrical conductivity is still continuing. Here we show that conventional dip-coating technique can offer fabrication of high quality mono- and bilayered films made of GO sheets. The method is based on our recent discovery that encapsulating individual GO sheets in a nanometer thick molecular brush copolymer layer allows for the nearly perfect formation of the GO layers via dip coating from water. By thermal reduction the bilayers (cemented by a carbon-forming polymer linker) are converted into highly conductive and transparent reduced GO films with a high conductivity up to 104 S/cm and optical transparency on the level of 90%. The value is the highest electrical conductivity reported for thermally reduced nanoscale GO films and is close to the conductivity of indium tin oxide currently in use for transparent electronic devices, thus making these layers intriguing candidates for replacement of ITO films.
ACS Nano | 2018
Ruilong Ma; Changsheng Wu; Zhong Lin Wang; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
We demonstrate the rapid, large-area transformation of bioenabled graphene laminates into multidimensional geometries for pop-up and stretchable applications. Water-vapor annealing facilitates the controlled plasticization of the multilayered silk-graphene morphologies, allowing highly localized kirigami cuts by programmable drag knife with diverse type and depth of cuts. By adjusting drag-knife depth, we can generate a microscale array of full and partial cuts, enabling a purely topological approach toward the control of metastable fold-unfold states and crack fracture paths in kirigami structures. Through orthogonal control over the graphene-silk composites nanoscale morphology, cut pattern, and semimetal-like conductivity, we showcase bioenabled laminates as a platform for prospective soft and shape-transforming electronics as flexible interconnects and stretchable energy harvesters.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Yaxian Wang; Ruilong Ma; Kesong Hu; Sunghan Kim; Guangqiang Fang; Zhengzhong Shao; Vladimir V. Tsukruk
Advanced Functional Materials | 2017
Ruilong Ma; Vladimir V. Tsukruk