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Virendra Singh

Bio: Virendra Singh is an academic researcher from University of Central Florida. The author has contributed to research in topics: Carbon nanotube & Coating. The author has an hindex of 23, co-authored 34 publications receiving 4730 citations. Previous affiliations of Virendra Singh include Armament Research and Development Establishment.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Graphene and its derivatives are being studied in nearly every field of science and engineering as mentioned in this paper, and recent progress has shown that the graphene-based materials can have a profound impact on electronic and optoelectronic devices, chemical sensors, nanocomposites and energy storage.

3,118 citations

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TL;DR: In this paper, a multiwalled carbon nanotube (CNT) reinforced aluminum nanocomposite coatings were prepared using cold gas kinetic spraying, which resulted in coatings of the order of 500μm in thickness.
Abstract: Multiwalled carbon nanotube (CNT) reinforced aluminum nanocomposite coatings were prepared using cold gas kinetic spraying. Spray drying was used to obtain a good dispersion of the nanotubes in micron-sized gas atomized Al–Si eutectic powders. Spray dried powders containing 5 wt.% CNT were blended with pure aluminum powder to give overall nominal CNT compositions of 0.5 wt.% and 1 wt.% respectively. Cold spraying resulted in coatings of the order of 500 μm in thickness. Fracture surfaces of deposits show that the nanotubes were uniformly distributed in the matrix. Nanotubes were shorter in length as they fractured due to impact and shearing between Al–Si particles and the Al matrix during the deposition process. Nanoindentation shows a distribution in the elastic modulus values from 40–229 GPa which is attributed to microstructural heterogeneity of the coatings that comprise the following: pure Al, Al–Si eutectic, porosity and CNTs.

203 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: HA-BNNT composite is envisioned as a potential material for stronger orthopedic implants and offers excellent mechanical properties-120% increment in elastic modulus, 129% higher hardness and 86% more fracture toughness, as compared to HA.
Abstract: This study proposes boron nitride nanotube (BNNT) reinforced hydroxyapatite (HA) as a novel composite material for orthopedic implant applications. The spark plasma sintered (SPS) composite structure shows higher density compared to HA. Minimal lattice mismatch between HA and BNNT leads to coherent bonding and strong interface. HA-4 wt% BNNT composite offers excellent mechanical properties-120% increment in elastic modulus, 129% higher hardness and 86% more fracture toughness, as compared to HA. Improvements in the hardness and fracture toughness are related to grain refinement and crack bridging by BNNTs. HA-BNNT composite also shows 75% improvement in the wear resistance. The wear morphology suggests localized plastic deformation supported by the sliding of outer walls of BNNT. Osteoblast proliferation and cell viability show no adverse effect of BNNT addition. HA-BNNT composite is, thus, envisioned as a potential material for stronger orthopedic implants.

188 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
01 Sep 2010-Carbon
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the role of carbon nanotube (CNT) reinforced hydroxyapatite (HA) composite synthesized using spark plasma sintering and found that CNTs play a role in grain boundary pinning and are responsible for the improved densification and retention of nanostructure throughout the thickness of sintered pellet.

186 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a homogenous dispersion of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in micron sized aluminum silicon alloy powders was achieved by spray drying, which allowed fabrication of thick composite coatings and hollow cylinders (5 mm thick) containing 5.5 and 10.5 wt.% CNTs by plasma spraying.
Abstract: Homogenous dispersion of carbon nanotubes (CNTs) in micron sized aluminum silicon alloy powders was achieved by spray drying. Excellent flowability of the powders allowed fabrication of thick composite coatings and hollow cylinders (5 mm thick) containing 5 wt.% and 10 wt.% CNT by plasma spraying. Two phase microstructure with matrix having good distribution of CNT and CNT rich clusters was observed. Microstructural evolution has been explained using single splat and the infiltration of CNT clusters by liquid metal. Partial CNT surface damage was observed in case of the 10 wt.% CNT coating due to CNT mesh formation and smaller size of spray dried agglomerate. Increase in the elastic modulus and improvement in the yield strength and elastic recovery properties due to CNT addition was observed by nanoindentation.

179 citations


Cited by
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01 Jun 2005

3,154 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: By critically analysing state-of-the-art technologies, this work aims to address the benefits and issues of graphene-based materials, as well as outline the most promising results and applications so far.
Abstract: Since its first isolation in 2004, graphene has become one of the hottest topics in the field of materials science, and its highly appealing properties have led to a plethora of scientific papers. Among the many affected areas of materials science, this 'graphene fever' has influenced particularly the world of electrochemical energy-storage devices. Despite widespread enthusiasm, it is not yet clear whether graphene could really lead to progress in the field. Here we discuss the most recent applications of graphene - both as an active material and as an inactive component - from lithium-ion batteries and electrochemical capacitors to emerging technologies such as metal-air and magnesium-ion batteries. By critically analysing state-of-the-art technologies, we aim to address the benefits and issues of graphene-based materials, as well as outline the most promising results and applications so far.

2,148 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
16 Jun 2017-Science
TL;DR: The permeability/selectivity trade-off is discussed, similarities and differences between synthetic and biological membranes are highlighted, challenges for existing membranes are described, and fruitful areas of future research are identified.
Abstract: BACKGROUND Synthetic membranes are used for desalination, dialysis, sterile filtration, food processing, dehydration of air and other industrial, medical, and environmental applications due to low energy requirements, compact design, and mechanical simplicity. New applications are emerging from the water-energy nexus, shale gas extraction, and environmental needs such as carbon capture. All membranes exhibit a trade-off between permeability—i.e., how fast molecules pass through a membrane material—and selectivity—i.e., to what extent the desired molecules are separated from the rest. However, biological membranes such as aquaporins and ion channels are both highly permeable and highly selective. Separation based on size difference is common, but there are other ways to either block one component or enhance transport of another through a membrane. Based on increasing molecular understanding of both biological and synthetic membranes, key design criteria for new membranes have emerged: (i) properly sized free-volume elements (or pores), (ii) narrow free-volume element (or pore size) distribution, (iii) a thin active layer, and (iv) highly tuned interactions between permeants of interest and the membrane. Here, we discuss the permeability/selectivity trade-off, highlight similarities and differences between synthetic and biological membranes, describe challenges for existing membranes, and identify fruitful areas of future research. ADVANCES Many organic, inorganic, and hybrid materials have emerged as potential membranes. In addition to polymers, used for most membranes today, materials such as carbon molecular sieves, ceramics, zeolites, various nanomaterials (e.g., graphene, graphene oxide, and metal organic frameworks), and their mixtures with polymers have been explored. Simultaneously, global challenges such as climate change and rapid population growth stimulate the search for efficient water purification and energy-generation technologies, many of which are membrane-based. Additional driving forces include wastewater reuse from shale gas extraction and improvement of chemical and petrochemical separation processes by increasing the use of light hydrocarbons for chemicals manufacturing. OUTLOOK Opportunities for advancing membranes include (i) more mechanically, chemically, and thermally robust materials; (ii) judiciously higher permeability and selectivity for applications where such improvements matter; and (iii) more emphasis on fundamental structure/property/processing relations. There is a pressing need for membranes with improved selectivity, rather than membranes with improved permeability, especially for water purification. Modeling at all length scales is needed to develop a coherent molecular understanding of membrane properties, provide insight for future materials design, and clarify the fundamental basis for trade-off behavior. Basic molecular-level understanding of thermodynamic and diffusion properties of water and ions in charged membranes for desalination and energy applications such as fuel cells is largely incomplete. Fundamental understanding of membrane structure optimization to control transport of minor species (e.g., trace-organic contaminants in desalination membranes, neutral compounds in charged membranes, and heavy hydrocarbons in membranes for natural gas separation) is needed. Laboratory evaluation of membranes is often conducted with highly idealized mixtures, so separation performance in real applications with complex mixtures is poorly understood. Lack of systematic understanding of methodologies to scale promising membranes from the few square centimeters needed for laboratory studies to the thousands of square meters needed for large applications stymies membrane deployment. Nevertheless, opportunities for membranes in both existing and emerging applications, together with an expanding set of membrane materials, hold great promise for membranes to effectively address separations needs.

1,794 citations