"Fire is a valuable engineering tool -- after all, a blast furnace is only an intense fire," says Martin Thuo, corresponding author of a paper on the work and a professor of materials science and engineering at North Carolina State University.
 
"Our technique, which we call inverse thermal degradation (ITD), employs a nanoscale thin film over a targeted material. The thin film changes in response to the heat of the fire, and regulates the amount of oxygen that can access the material. That means we can control the rate at which the material heats up -- which, in turn, influences the chemical reactions taking place within the material. Basically, we can fine-tune how and where the fire changes the material."
 
Here's how ITD works. You start out with your target material, such as a cellulose fiber.
 
That fiber is then coated with a nanometer thick layer of molecules.
 
The coated fibers are then exposed to an intense flame. The outer surface of the molecules combusts easily, raising the temperature in the immediate vicinity.
 
But the inner surface of the molecular coating chemically changes, creating an even thinner layer of glass around the cellulose fibers.
 
This glass limits the amount of oxygen that can access the fibers, preventing the cellulose from bursting into flames.
 
Instead, the fibers smolder -- burning slowly, from the inside out.
 
"Without the ITD's protective layer, applying flame to cellulose fibers would just result in ash," Thuo says.
 
"We can engineer the protective layer in order to tune the amount of oxygen that reaches the target material. And we can engineer the target material in order to produce desirable characteristics."
 
The researchers conducted proof-of-concept demonstrations with cellulose fibers to produce microscale carbon tubes.
 
The researchers could control the thickness of the carbon tube walls by controlling the size of the cellulose fibers they started with; by introducing various salts to the fibers (which further controls the rate of burning); and by varying the amount of oxygen that passes through the protective layer.
 
"We have several applications in mind already, which we will be addressing in future studies," Thuo says.
 
"We're also open to working with the private sector to explore various practical uses, such as developing engineered carbon tubes for oil-water separation -- which would be useful for both industrial applications and environmental remediation."
 
The paper, "Spatially Directed Pyrolysis via Thermally Morphing Surface Adducts," is published in the journal Angewandte Chemie. Co-authors are Dhanush Jamadgni and Alana Pauls, Ph.D. students at NC State; Julia Chang and Andrew Martin, postdoctoral researchers at NC State; Chuanshen Du, Paul Gregory, Rick Dorn and Aaron Rossini of Iowa State University; and E. Johan Foster at the University of British Columbia.