| Literature DB >> 24759082 |
Yongcun Zhou1, Yagang Yao2, Chia-Yun Chen3, Kyoungsik Moon3, Hong Wang4, Ching-Ping Wong5.
Abstract
Polymer modified fillers in composites has attracted the attention of numerous researchers. These fillers are composed of core-shell structures that exhibit enhanced physical and chemical properties that are associated with shell surface control and encapsulated core materials. In this study, we have described an apt method to prepare polyimide (PI)-modified aluminum nitride (AlN) fillers, AlN@PI. These fillers are used for electronic encapsulation in high performance polymer composites. Compared with that of untreated AlN composite, these AlN@PI/epoxy composites exhibit better thermal and dielectric properties. At 40 wt% of filler loading, the highest thermal conductivity of AlN@PI/epoxy composite reached 2.03 W/mK. In this way, the thermal conductivity is approximately enhanced by 10.6 times than that of the used epoxy matrix. The experimental results exhibiting the thermal conductivity of AlN@PI/epoxy composites were in good agreement with the values calculated from the parallel conduction model. This research work describes an effective pathway that modifies the surface of fillers with polymer coating. Furthermore, this novel technique improves the thermal and dielectric properties of fillers and these can be used extensively for electronic packaging applications.Entities:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24759082 PMCID: PMC3998031 DOI: 10.1038/srep04779
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 1(a) Schematic diagram depicting the formation process of AlN@PI particles. SEM images of (b) untreated AlN particles and (c) PI modified AlN particles.
Figure 2SEM images of (a) 10 wt%, (b) 20 wt%, (c) 30 wt%, and (d) 40 wt% AlN@PI/epoxy composites having different filler loading.
Figure 3(a) Thermal conductivity of AlN@PI/epoxy and untreated AlN/epoxy composites using 10–40 wt% of fillers. (b) Experimental results and modified model values of thermal conductivity as a function of filler loading of the AlN@PI/epoxy composites. The frequency dependency of (c) relative permittivity and (d) tan delta of the AlN@PI/epoxy and AlN/epoxy composites with different weight percent of fillers in frequency range (2 MHz–1 GHz).
Thermal conductivity and dielectric properties of various ceramic/polymer composites. vf represents volume fraction
| Materials | Filler loading | Thermal conductivity (W/mK) | Permittivity (1 MHz) | Year | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AlN/Polyimide | 32 vf | 0.75 | - | 2004 | [ |
| AlN/LLDPE | 70 wt | 1.25 | 4.2 | 2011 | [ |
| AlN/PMMA | 70 vf | 1.87 | 4.4 | 2012 | [ |
| AlN/Epoxy | 36 vf | 1.46 | - | 2013 | [ |
| Al/Epoxy | 0.48vf | 1.47 | 33 | 2010 | [ |
| GNPs/Epoxy | 0.027wt | 0.72 | 80 | 2013 | [ |
| AlN@PI/Epoxy | 40 wt | 2.03 | 6.85 | our work |
Figure 4(a) FTIR spectra of pure AlN, pure PI, and AlN@PI particles and (b) TGA profiles of 10–40 wt% of AlN@PI/epoxy composites under nitrogen atmosphere.