JOURNAL ARTICLE

Electrical Response to Organic Vapor of Conductive Composites from Amorphous Polymer/Carbon Black Prepared by Polymerization Filling

Jun Rong LiJia XuMing Qiu ZhangMin Zhi Rong

Year: 2003 Journal:   Macromolecular Materials and Engineering Vol: 288 (2)Pages: 103-107   Publisher: Wiley

Abstract

Abstract In recent years, conductive polymer composites have found applications as gas sensors because of their sudden change in electric resistance of several orders of magnitude when the materials are exposed to certain solvent vapors. However, the composites having this function reported so far are mostly based on crystalline polymeric matrices, which factually sets a limit to materials selection. The present work prepares polystyrene/carbon black composites through polymerization filling and proves that the amorphous polymer composites can also serve as gas sensing materials. The composites' percolation threshold is much lower than that of the composites produced by dispersive mixing. In addition, high responsivity to some organic vapors coupled with sufficient reproducibility is acquired. The experimental data show that molecular weight and molecular weight distribution of the matrix polymer and conducting filler content exert great influence on the electrical response behavior of the composites. As a result, composites performance can be purposely tailored accordingly. Compared with the approaches of melt‐blending and solution‐blending, the current technique is characterized by many advantages, such as simplicity, low cost, and easy to be controlled. Effect of different organic solvent vapors on the electric resistance of PS/CB composites (CB content = 10.35 vol.‐%). magnified image Effect of different organic solvent vapors on the electric resistance of PS/CB composites (CB content = 10.35 vol.‐%).

Keywords:
Materials science Composite material Carbon black Polymer Percolation threshold Polymerization Amorphous solid Electrical conductor Percolation (cognitive psychology) Electrical resistance and conductance Polystyrene Electrical resistivity and conductivity Natural rubber

Metrics

30
Cited By
3.44
FWCI (Field Weighted Citation Impact)
17
Refs
0.92
Citation Normalized Percentile
Is in top 1%
Is in top 10%

Citation History

Topics

Conducting polymers and applications
Physical Sciences →  Materials Science →  Polymers and Plastics
Advanced Sensor and Energy Harvesting Materials
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
Advanced Chemical Sensor Technologies
Physical Sciences →  Engineering →  Biomedical Engineering
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