| Literature DB >> 26120871 |
Haejong Jung1, Seunggun Yu1, Nam-Seok Bae1, Suk Man Cho1, Richard Hahnkee Kim1, Sung Hwan Cho1, Ihn Hwang1, Beomjin Jeong1, Ji Su Ryu2, Junyeon Hwang2, Soon Man Hong3, Chong Min Koo3, Cheolmin Park1.
Abstract
Design of materials to be heat-conductive in a preferred direction is a crucial issue for efficient heat dissipation in systems using stacked devices. Here, we demonstrate a facile route to fabricate polymer composites with directional thermal conduction. Our method is based on control of the orientation of fillers with anisotropic heat conduction. Melt-compression of solution-cast poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) and graphene nanoflake (GNF) films in an L-shape kinked tube yielded a lightweight polymer composite with the surface normal of GNF preferentially aligned perpendicular to the melt-flow direction, giving rise to a directional thermal conductivity of approximately 10 W/mK at 25 vol % with an anisotropic thermal conduction ratio greater than six. The high directional thermal conduction was attributed to the two-dimensional planar shape of GNFs readily adaptable to the molten polymer flow, compared with highly entangled carbon nanotubes and three-dimensional graphite fillers. Furthermore, our composite with its density of approximately 1.5 g/cm(3) was mechanically stable, and its thermal performance was successfully preserved above 100 °C even after multiple heating and cooling cycles. The results indicate that the methodology using an L-shape kinked tube is a new way to achieve polymer composites with highly anisotropic thermal conduction.Entities:
Keywords: L-shape kinked tube; graphene nanoflake; orientation; poly(vinylidene fluoride); polymer composite; thermal conductivity
Year: 2015 PMID: 26120871 DOI: 10.1021/acsami.5b02681
Source DB: PubMed Journal: ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ISSN: 1944-8244 Impact factor: 9.229