JOURNAL ARTICLE

NON-LINEAR THERMAL CONDUCTIVITY ENHANCEMENT IN NANOCOMPOSITES WITH ALIGNED-CNT IMPLEMENTATION

Namiko YamamotoHai M. DuongBrian L. WardleAmy MarconnetKenneth E. Goodson

Year: 2011 Journal:   DSpace@MIT (Massachusetts Institute of Technology)   Publisher: Massachusetts Institute of Technology

Abstract

Carbon nanotubes (CNTs) have been expected to enhance thermal conductivity in various materials including composites, for applications such as thermal interface materials. However, the thermal properties of bulk CNTs and CNT composites tend not to achieve the high values of individual nanotubes. Factors that cause such scaling effects include CNT morphology (length, alignment, entanglement, etc.), and inter-CNT/CNTmedium boundary properties. It is critical to evaluate and minimize these effects. However, structure-property relationships are not yet well understood, and thus effective use of CNTs has not been achieved for the majority of currently existing CNT polymer composites. \nIn this work, consistent CNT samples with well-controlled morphology were fabricated by embedding aligned CNTs in polymer to create aligned CNT polymer nanocomposites (A-CNTPNCs), as shown in Figure 1. A-CNT-PNCs were thoroughly evaluated for their anisotropic thermal properties, and a non-linear increasing trend of thermal conductivity has been observed with increasing CNT volume fraction (vCNT). This newly identified trend was understood through comparison with both analytical and numerical models of the transport behavior. Such understanding can help utilize CNTs in the most effective ways for tailoring thermal conductivities for bulk composite and other applications.

Keywords:
Thermal conductivity Materials science Nanocomposite Composite material Thermal Conductivity Thermodynamics Physics

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Citation History

Topics

Thermal properties of materials
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Carbon Nanotubes in Composites
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Materials Chemistry
Thermal Radiation and Cooling Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Civil and Structural Engineering
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