Yang Yang1, Jinliang He1, Guangning Wu2, Jun Hu1. 1. State Key Laboratory of Power System, Department of Electrical Engineering, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China. 2. School of Electrical Engineering, Southwest Jiaotong University, Chengdu 610031, China.
Abstract
Insulation performance of the dielectrics under extreme conditions always attracts widespread attention in electrical and electronic field. How to improve the high-temperature dielectric properties of insulation materials is one of the key issues in insulation system design of electrical devices. This paper studies the temperature-dependent corona resistance of polyimide (PI)/Al2O3 nanocomposite films under high-frequency square-wave pulse conditions. Extended corona resistant lifetime under high-temperature conditions is experimentally observed in the 2 wt% nanocomposite samples. The "thermal stabilization effect" is proposed to explain this phenomenon which attributes to a new kind of trap band caused by nanoparticles. This effect brings about superior space charge characteristics and corona resistance under high temperature with certain nano-doping concentration. The proposed theory is experimentally demonstrated by space charge analysis and thermally stimulated current (TSC) tests. This discovered effect is of profound significance on improving high-temperature dielectric properties of nanocomposites towards various applications.
Insulation performance of the dielectrics under extreme conditions always attracts widespread attention in electrical and electronic field. How to improve the high-temperature dielectric properties of insulation materials is one of the key issues in insulation system design of electrical devices. This paper studies the temperature-dependent corona resistance of polyimide (PI)/Al2O3 nanocomposite films under high-frequency square-wave pulse conditions. Extended corona resistant lifetime under high-temperature conditions is experimentally observed in the 2 wt% nanocomposite samples. The "thermal stabilization effect" is proposed to explain this phenomenon which attributes to a new kind of trap band caused by nanoparticles. This effect brings about superior space charge characteristics and corona resistance under high temperature with certain nano-doping concentration. The proposed theory is experimentally demonstrated by space charge analysis and thermally stimulated current (TSC) tests. This discovered effect is of profound significance on improving high-temperature dielectric properties of nanocomposites towards various applications.
Polymer/nano-filler composites have attracted a great deal of interest for scientific
researches and industrial applications in many fields including aerospace, biomedicine,
structural materials, electronic and electrical (or power) engineering. Nanocomposites
filled with nano-dopants can significantly improve the performance of the polymers and
sometimes bring novel mechanical, thermal and electrical properties to overcome the low
operating temperature of polymer matrixes. The application of nanocomposites in
electrical insulation field brings about the concept of nanodielectrics which was first
theoretically raised by Lewis (1994)1. Recent researches demonstrated
that nano-fillers (usually oxide nanoparticles) impart decreased permittivity23, enhanced breakdown strength45, corona
resistance6 and thermal-mechanical performance7 to the
original polymer dielectrics especially under high-temperature conditions. Nowadays,
using nano-fillers to tailor the properties of nanodielectrics has become a popular and
effective strategy to develop dielectrics and many other engineering materials with
specific high performance. However, the mechanism of nano-modification is still an open
issue in consideration of the complex nanostructure and characteristics of phase
interface89. The novel properties of nanocomposites are thought to
be dominated by the interface1011. Many researchers have tried a
variety of methods to probe and characterize these small (few tens of nm) but
significant regions1213. According to the researches mentioned above,
various models focused on the structure and characteristics of phase interface have been
carried out including DLVO (Derjaguin and Landau, Verwey and Overbeek) model14, multi-core model15 and water shell model16. Nevertheless, these physical or chemical descriptions are not clear enough to
explain all the experimental results and the temperature condition has not been taken
into account. The design of nanodielectrics is still largely based on experience. Phase
interface models of the nanocomposites should be further improved to provide the
reliable theoretical basis for engineering practice.In insulation system design of electrical devices, how to improve the dielectric
performance of insulation materials under high-temperature conditions is one of the key
issues81718. Polyimide (PI) has been gaining increasing attention
in various insulating applications (e.g., insulation of traction motor windings,
microelectronics, flexible electronics, etc.) due to its outstanding dielectric
performance as well as excellent thermal and mechanical characteristics19202122. Nano doping of ceramic oxides (such as
Al2O3, TiO2, SiO2, etc.) can greatly
enhance the dielectric properties of PI composite and maintain high thermal
endurance1920212223. Some kinds of ceramic nano-dopants in PI
matrix provide better dielectric properties at higher temperature, which have been used
to improve the insulation of traction motor windings. Recently, Zha et al. found
that nano-TiO2 particles could improve the dielectric strength, lifetime, and
space charge characteristics based on the dielectric properties tests of
PI/TiO2 nanocomposites1920. Zhou et al.
attributed the enhanced corona resistance of PI nanocomposites to the high charge
transport capacity of nanostructure based on the corona-aging and breakdown tests under
high frequency square wave pulses2124. However, most of the researches
focus on the comparison between pure PI and nanocomposites at the same temperature. Few
in-depth explanations of this effect, that the nanoparticles improve the insulating
properties of polyimide at high temperature, have been proposed up till now, and the
influential mechanism is still uncertain.In this research, an extension of corona resistant lifetime is observed under
high-temperature conditions with regard to the PI samples doped with a certain
concentration (2 wt%) of nano-Al2O3. In order to
explain this unexpected phenomenon, the “thermal stabilization
effect” is proposed based on the space charge analysis by pulsed electro
acoustic (PEA) method. The thermally stimulated current (TSC) tests further demonstrate
the synergistic effect of nano-doping concentration and temperature on nanoscale
electronic transport. Based on the results of PEA and TSC tests, the underlying
mechanism of this effect along with its nano-doping-concentration and temperature
dependence is interpreted in reference to the “multi-core” model
with an innovative temperature-dependent nanostructure of phase interface introduced.
This improved model reveals a candidate theoretical foundation for refined
nanodielectrics design with the optimal nano-doping concentration under high-temperature
conditions of various electrical insulation applications. The proposed
“thermal stabilization effect” is essentially bound up with the
electronic transport in nanoscale system of polymer nanocomposites which not only affect
the corona resistance but dominate the dielectric response, conductivity, electrical
breakdown and dielectric loss of polymer nanocomposites19. Thus this
effect is a general phenomenon in dielectrics and electrical insulation. In addition,
further investigation about this effect is of great significance in characterizing and
modeling the phase interface regions of polymer nanocomposites.
Results and Discussion
Characterization of chemical structures and micro-morphology
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films with 0 wt%,
2 wt% and 5 wt% nano-Al2O3
(30 nm) are prepared by in-situ polymerization. Nanoparticles
are surface modified with silane coupling agent KH550 and dispersed by
ultrasound (Method section). Pyromellitic dianhydride (PMDA) and
4,4′-Oxdianline (ODA) are chosen as the monomers to prepare Kapton
(Method section), a kind of PI first developed by DuPont. Fourier transform
infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR, Thermo Nicolet 5700, USA) tests are carried out to
analyze the chemical structure of the PI/Al2O3
nanocomposite films (Supplementary Note 1,
Fig. S1). The FT-IR spectrum curves of the nanocomposite films
demonstrate the completed polymerization and imidization reaction of the
samples. Micro morphologies of the films are observed by field emission scanning
electron microscope (FE-SEM, ZEISS Sigma, Germany) (Supplementary Note 2, Fig. S2). The surface
SEM image demonstrates the good surface smoothness of the synthesized film which
is crucial for corona-aging tests. From the eroded cross-section SEM image (see
Method section), it is observed that the nanoparticles are below
100 nm in size and show homogeneous distribution.
Corona-aging lifetime
In the corona-aging tests, the rode-plate electrode structure, the corona-aging
area and the experimental equipment are shown in Supplementary Note 3, Fig. S3 (a), (b), and
Fig. S4, respectively. The
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite samples and electrodes are
cleaned with anhydrous alcohol, then desiccated in the vacuum oven at
120 °C for 2 hours before corona-aging tests
to avoid the influence of water absorption on the dielectric behavior of PI25. The running temperature of inverter-fed motor polyimide
insulation reaches 140 °C26 or higher
during the practical operation and the polyimide films in many power electronic
devices including insulated gate bipolar translator (IGBT) have to sustain the
operating temperature of 150 °C27. Thus
the experiments are carried out on 0 wt%, 2 wt% and
5 wt% PI/Al2O3 nanocomposites films at
80 °C, 120 °C and
160 °C, respectively. Previous research indicated that
the space charge accumulation threshold fields of common polyimide film-100HN
and corona-resistant polyimide film-100CR (both are DuPont products, the former
is pure PI film and the latter is PI/Al2O3 nanocomposites
film) are 31.5 kV/mm and 35 kV/mm21,
respectively. In order to study the influence of space charge accumulation on
corona resistance, the tested electrical fields are above 30 kV/mm
and slightly higher than the referenced threshold fields mentioned above. The
applied square-wave voltage is adjusted according to the thickness of the
samples to set the electric fields as 30 kV/mm,
33 kV/mm, 36 kV/mm, 39 kV/mm and
42 kV/mm (peak-to-peak value). The frequency of the HV square wave
pulse is fixed at 10 kHz during all the tests. All the parallel
experiments are repeated four times to obtain the error bar data.From the corona-aging tests, the relationship between the lifetime and the
average electric field intensity is shown in Fig. 1. The
corona resistant lifetime L is related to applied voltage2829, and the relationship can be further derived as an inverse
power model of
Figure 1
The relationship between the corona resistant lifetime and the average
electric field intensity from the corona-aging tests of different kinds of
nanocomposite films at different temperatures.
The curves are fitted by the least square method with power type and the
error bars show the maximum and minimum value among the four repeated tests.
(a) Pure PI (0 wt%) films. (b)
2 wt% PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films.
(c) 5 wt% PI/Al2O3
nanocomposite films.
where Eav is the average electric field intensity, and n
is a constant related to material property and test conditions (Supplementary Note 4).The lifetime of PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films is much higher
than the pure PI films especially under low field (near 30 kV/mm)
and Al2O3 nanoparticles effectively improve the corona
resistance of nanocomposite films. From 80 °C to
120 °C, a little improvement of the lifetime is obtained
through all the electrical field strengths regarding the pure PI samples. This
might be due to the mobility enhancement of charge carriers under high
temperature which restrains the accumulation of surface charge and remits the
local electric field enhancement. At 160 °C, the
lifetime shows higher dependence on the applied electric field strength and
reduces to the values lower than the 80 °C ones. This is
caused by the thermal aging of the polymer dielectrics. Because the
L-Eav curves indicate the synthetic effect of
temperature on the charge mobility and the dielectric properties of pure PI
films, the dependence of lifetime on the temperature condition is not very
obvious. The lifetime of the nanocomposite samples (2 wt% and
5 wt%) shows stronger dependence on temperature in comparison with
the pure PI samples. At 80 °C and
120 °C conditions, 5 wt% nanocomposite films
show better corona resistant performance than the 2 wt% films.
However, the 2 wt% and 5 wt% films show remarkably
different dependence of corona resistance on temperature. As the temperature
increases from 80 °C to 160 °C,
the insulation lifetime of the 2 wt% samples presents non-monotonic
variation trends, while the insulation lifetime of the 5 wt% samples
keeps decreasing. At 160 °C, the lifetime of
2 wt% samples increases to the values higher than the
5 wt% ones under all the tested electrical field strengthes.
Al2O3 nano-dopants not only greatly improve the corona
resistance of nanocomposite films but give rise to some new
temperature-dependent dielectric properties. Temperature increment brings the
2 wt% films unexpected enhancement of corona resistance, which is
described as the “thermal stabilization effect” here. In
fact, similar phenomenon and effects, that the nanocomposites materials show
superior dielectric properties under high-temperature conditions, are widespread
in recent researches regarding dielectric spectrum, dielectric loss3031, electrical breakdown and high-field capacitive energy
storage properties18. All of these properties above are dominated
by the electronic transport in nanoscale system of polymer nanocomposites which
will be discussed in details below.
Space charge distribution
In order to illustrate the mechanism of this phenomenon, the space charge
distribution is measured by pulsed electro acoustic (PEA) method. The long term
corona-aged samples are treated under 1 kHz square wave pulse for
4 hours with the peak-to-peak electric field density of
32 kV/mm so that the corona-aging process is much mitigated and the
degree of corona-aging is easy to adjust. The space charge distribution is
measured under 20 kV/mm to analyze the carrier trapping of shallow
traps. Details of the PEA measurement system and the calculation of space charge
density refer to ref. 32.As is shown in Fig. 2, few hetero-charge indicates that
there are nearly no ionic carriers, which is generated by ionization of chemical
impurities within the matrix, and the space charge is formed due to the injected
homo-charge (electron/hole) carriers at the electrodes. Figure
2(a,b) indicate that the electronic injection and accumulation (near
the negative electrode) of pure PI films corona-aged at
160 °C are much severer than the samples corona-aged at
80 °C. In regard to the films corona-aged at
80 °C, as shown in Fig. 2(a,c),
more electrons are injected into 2 wt% nanocomposite samples than
pure PI ones. It can be assumed that nano-dopants introduce a new trap band with
lower energy level and cause electronic trapping under low field. From Fig. 2(c,d), as the corona-aging temperature varies from
80 °C to 160 °C, the electronic
injection and accumulation of PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films
are mitigated. The comparison between pure PI films and 2 wt%
nanocomposite films corona-aged at 160 °C indicates the
obvious mitigation of space charge injection of PI/Al2O3
nanocomposite films at high temperature except for the slight charge injection
caused by the newly introduced shallow traps as mentioned above. Nano-dopants
restrain the injection and accumulation of electrons then alleviate the local
electric field which mitigates partial discharges and improves the corona
resistance213334 especially under high temperature
conditions.
Figure 2
Space charge distribution (measured by PEA method) of long term corona-aged
pure PI and PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films under
polarization electric field of 20 kV/mm for
2 hours.
The samples are treated under high-frequency high-voltage pulse at different
temperatures: (a) Pure PI films corona-aged at
80 °C. (b) Pure PI films corona-aged at
160 °C. (c) 2 wt% nanocomposite
films corona-aged at 80 °C. (d)
2 wt% nanocomposite films corona-aged at
160 °C.
Energy level of carrier traps
Thermally stimulated current (TSC) of the long term corona-aged films are
measured to further prove the change of energy levels of carrier traps (details
are shown in Method section). The trap level density distribution of the samples
can be obtained from the thermally stimulated depolarization current (TSDC)
density by numerical calculation method35 (Supplementary Note 5) and the trap level
density distribution curves are shown in Fig. 3. The
numerical differences of the trap level densities between the tested samples are
caused by the different thicknesses of the films which are unavoidable during
the preparation process. However, the quantity variance of the traps would not
make too much influence on the following discussion and it is the change of the
density distribution that make difference. In order to illustrate the energy
level changes of the samples corona-aged under different conditions, the average
trap depths of the samples can be estimated through the half-width method36 because the origin of depolarization current is the injection of
electrons/holes (homo-charge, as demonstrated by PEA tests):
Figure 3
The trap level density distribution curves of PI/Al2O3
nanocomposite films with different nano-doping concentrations and temperature
conditions of long term corona-aging.
(a) Unaged samples. (b) Samples corona-aged at
80 °C. (c) Samples corona-aged at
160 °C. (d) The trap depth of the samples
calculated the half-width method.
where T is the temperature corresponding to the peak
value of TSC curves, ΔT is the width of the current curve at
half peak and k is the Boltzmann constant. The average trap depths
calculated by the half-width method are shown in Fig. 3(d)
and Table 1.
Table 1
The energy depth obtained by half-width method.
Samples
Trap depth E [ev]
Unaged
Corona-aged at 80 °C
Corona-aged at 160 °C
0 wt%
0.5921
0.7885
0.8616
2 wt%
0.5381
0.5465
0.6118
5 wt%
0.5818
0.4997
0.7793
Figure 3 illustrates that the trap levels of the samples
distribute between 0.6 eV and 1.2 eV and show a peak
similar to the TSDC curves (Supplementary
Note 5). The peak levels of the unaged samples are
0.928 eV, 0.919 eV and 0.924 eV for
0 wt%, 2 wt% and 5 wt%
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films, respectively. The
average trap depths calculated by half-width method also show the same variation
trend. The nano-dopants drag the peak of trap level density curves to the lower
energy levels or the PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films
introduce a new trap band with lower energy level comparing with the pure PI
films. Nevertheless, the changes are not obvious because the TSDC is almost
contributed by the detrapping of the charge carriers within a finite depth
(typically only 5 μm)35 of the films
adjacent to the electrodes and the nanofiller concentration near the surface of
the film is always lower than the inside for the prepared nanocomposite films.
Regarding to the long term corona-aged samples, the trap level density curves
and the average trap depths show significant differences because the
aforementioned thin surface layer of the films are corroded by corona discharge
and the inner nanocomposites can be tested. Higher corona-aging temperature
results in deeper charge carrier traps in pure PI films corresponding to
chemical or physical defects formed by corona erosion. The trap level of the
corona-aged samples reasonably indicate the degradation degree which reflects
the corona resistance of the dielectrics. After corona-aged at
80 °C (Fig. 3(b)), the trap level
density of the 2 wt% film shows a small overlapped peak with low
energy level (<0.9 eV) and indicates the shallow traps
introduced by the nanoparticles. There is also a small high energy level peak in
the 5 wt% sample’s curve, this might be due to the small
amount of defects formed by the aggregation of high concentration nanoparticles.
As is demonstrated by the results of corona-aging lifetime tests, this slight
aggregation of nanoparticles does not degrade the dielectric performance of the
films and the average trap depth decreases. Nanocomposite films show lower trap
energy level and lower degradation degree comparing with pure PI films, and the
average trap depth of the 5 wt% sample is lower than the
2 wt% sample. The high nano-dopants concentration films contain more
shallow traps which agrees well with the results and the assumption in
“space charge distribution” section. As the temperature
conditions of corona-aging rise to 160 °C, the trap
level density peak of the 5 wt% sample moves to the higher level and
the average trap depth increases a lot which indicates severe degradation of the
film. The trap energy level of corona-aged nanocomposite films with
5 wt% nano-Al2O3 becomes lower (aged at
80 °C) and then rises higher (aged at
160 °C). The peak value and average trap depth of the
2 wt% sample maintain at a low level which indicates subdued degree
of corona-aging. The 2 wt% nanocomposite film exerts better
corona-resistant performance than the 5 wt% one at high temperature
which is in correspondence with the results of corona-aging lifetime tests.
Higher concentration (5 wt%) of nanofiller contributes to better
dielectric properties at low temperature (80 °C) while
showing serious degradation and sacrificing the “thermal
stabilization effect” at high temperature
(160 °C).The aforementioned phenomenon appears in a certain range of nano-doping
concentration at a certain range of temperature which indicates that the
corona-resistance and space charge characteristics of
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films not only depend on the
nano-doping-concentration but show some temperature-dependence. The improvement
of dielectric performance and space charge characteristics introduced by a
certain concentration of nano-dopants has been studied by many researchers with
some discrepancy among their results and conclusions933. Up
till now, few of them take the temperature condition into account and this may
be one of the main influence factors. To further give a comprehensive
description about the various behaviors of polymer-nanofiller system under
different nano-doping-concentration and temperature conditions, the
“thermal stabilization effect” of the nano-dopants is
interpreted below.
Mechanisms of the “thermal stabilization
effect”
Based on the theory of interphase and “interaction
zones”, Tanaka proposed the “multi-core”
model to explain the interaction mechanism between nanofiller and polymer
matrix89. The model describes the phase interface as a
three-layer shell structure overlapped with an electric double layer, and it
attributes the reduction of space charge accumulation to the new traps in the
phase interface, especially in the loose layer (or the third layer)9. Compared with the original traps in the polymer matrix, these
new traps are shallower (with lower energy level) because these regions have
high free volume and low density. The shallow traps will not hold the electronic
carriers for a long time37. On the contrary, they would help the
carriers to transport then lead to high mobility of the electronic carriers and
mitigate space charge accumulation9.However, the nanostructures introduced by different nano-doping concentrations
may be entirely different. Because of the low nano-dopants concentration (not
more than 5 wt%), the nanoparticles in polymer matrix are incompact
and the spatial positions of the nanoparticles can be treated as a simple cubic
stacking system which gives the lowest space utilization. As is shown in Fig. 4, according to the density of PI (Kapton,
1.42 g/cm3),
α-Al2O3 (true density,
3.6 g/cm3) and particle diameter
(30 nm), the inter-particle distance (surface to surface) can be
calculated as 91.05 nm and 58.64 nm for
2 wt% and 5 wt% in simple cubic stacking, respectively.
Here the density decrease of low density region is ignored. The
temperature-dependent chain mobility would change the structure of phase
interface. The total thickness of three-layer shells is 10 to 30 nm
and the third layer shell of “multi-core” is
characterized by many factors with strong temperature dependence (e.g., chain
mobility)8.
Figure 4
Nano-dopants concentration and temperature determine the nanostructures of
phase interface based on “multi-core” model: (a)
2 wt% nanocomposites show small shallow-trap regions at
80 °C.(b) 5 wt% nanocomposites show large shallow-trap regions
and low carrier mobility at 80 °C. (c)
2 wt% nanocomposites show large shallow-trap regions and high
carrier mobility at 160 °C which help carriers
transport. (d) 5 wt% nanocomposites show large
shallow-trap regions and overlapping low-resistance paths at
160 °C which causes high energy carrier to attack
polymer chains.
As is illustrated in Fig. 4, nanostructures introduced by
different nano-dopants concentration and temperature conditions would result in
various electronic carrier transport behaviors. It is assumed that, as the
temperature increases from 80 °C to
160 °C, the thicknesses of three-layer shells will be
extended. In the case of low nano-doping concentration and low temperature
represented in Fig. 4(a), the volume fraction of phase
interface is small and electrons are more likely to be captured by the original
(deep) traps accompanied with ultraviolet emission38 which would
lead to further degradation of the matrix. In Fig. 4(b,c),
large volume fraction of phase interface is introduced by small inter-particle
distance and large layer shell thickness, respectively. There are more electrons
trapped in deep traps in (b) compared with (c) because electrons show higher
mobility at higher temperature. If the inter-particle distance is not large
enough, regarding to the 5 wt% samples, the shells would overlap
with each other at higher temperature, as presented in Fig.
4(d). Then a loose-layer path (the dot dash line) is formed for the
electrons to transport. Considering the high-free-volume low-density
characteristics, these loose-layer paths provide long mean free path for
electrons39. Electrons are likely to choose these
low-resistance paths and get more energy from the electrical field. If the
electronic carriers are accelerated to an enough high speed, these high energy
electrons would break the molecular chains and result in structural defects of
high density in the polymer matrix which would act as deep traps and accumulate
space charges4041. This can explain the formation of extra deep
traps in the 5 wt% samples corona-aged at high temperature
(160 °C) as shown in TSC results. The trap density
distribution and the trap depths calculated by the aforementioned half-width
method reasonably confirm the above interpretation.In consequence, the increment of temperature may not only contribute to the
formation of shallow-trap region but helps build the low-resistance paths for
electrons as well in the case of short inter-particle distance. On the basis of
the mechanism proposed above, the electronic carriers are more likely to be
accelerated in the loose-layer than in the matrix. If the inter-particle
distance is larger than twice of the layer shell thickness to avoid overlapping
of the loose-layers, electrons would be transported through the low-density
regions (the phase interface) and the high-density regions (the matrix)
alternately. Then the kinetic energy of the electrons is limited within a range
determined by the ratio between low-density path and high-density path or the
volume fraction of the phase interface regions on a certain condition. An
appropriate electron migration rate (kinetic energy) helps restrain the trapping
of electronic carriers without damaging the matrix. The inter-particle distance
and the interface thickness are determined by nano-dopants concentration and
temperature, respectively. It is easy to consider the optimal nano-dopants
concentration which may bring the most satisfactory space charge characteristics
at a certain temperature. The aforementioned mechanisms of the
“thermal stabilization effect” provide the probable
descriptions of electronic transport in nanoscale system of polymer
nanocomposites. The estimated nanostructures of the phase interface based on the
“multi-core” model reasonably conform the results of
space charge distribution (PEA) tests and TSC tests.
Conclusions
The “thermal stabilization effect” based on the space charge
analysis and thermally stimulated current (TSC) tests has been proposed to explain
the extension of corona-aging lifetime of 2 wt%
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films under high-temperature
conditions. The results of TSC tests agree reasonably well with the
nano-doping-concentration dependence and temperature-dependent mechanism of this
effect which is first interpreted here in reference to the
“multi-core” model. In summary, certain-concentration
nano-doping of Al2O3 not only improves the high frequency high
voltage (HV) square wave corona resistance of PI nanocomposites but brings the
“thermal stabilization effect” of nanoparticles as well and
endows PI/Al2O3 nanocomposites with better insulating
performance at higher temperatures.The interpretation of the “thermal stabilization effect” is
based on the discussion about the electronic transport in nanoscale system which
plays the dominate role in the electrical properties of polymer nanocomposites
considering the large surface area of nanoparticles and the novel characteristics of
the interface regions1. Similar analysis can be performed to explain
the non-monotonic temperature and nano-dopants concentration dependence of
dielectric spectrum, dielectric loss and conductivity for a variety of polymer
nanocomposites. The proposed temperature dependence of the interface nanostructure
along with its influence on the behavior of electronic carriers provides a candidate
theoretical foundation for a more accurate model to characterize the phase interface
region which is still an open issue in the field of polymer nanocomposites. In
practical application, the extreme operating condition is usually accompanied by
high temperatures and polymer-based dielectrics are usually limited for their
relatively low working temperatures18. This improved model
contributes to design high-performance polymer nanodielectrics especially for the
application of high-temperature conditions. For some direct examples, regarding the
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposites, “thermal
stabilization effect” would minimize the insulation space for more
winding turns and raise the operating temperature then improve the power density of
electrical machine for electric vehicles etc. The potential optimal nano-dopants
concentration aiming at the high running temperature would significantly improve the
insulating performance and heat resistance of PI films applied in power electronic
modules and many other microelectronic devices4243. Further study
of this effect and its generalized investigation in the field of polymer
nanocomposites would be of great significance for electrical insulation and many
other applications.
Methods
Surface modification of Al2O3 NPs
To modify the nanoparticles, about 0.1 g (1% the quality of
nano-Al2O3) silane coupling agent KH550 (Sinopharm
Chimical Reagent Co.,Ltd, China) is added to the alcohol (95 ml)
water (5 ml) solution dispersed with about 10 g
nano-Al2O3 (α phase, 30 nm,
Aladdin Industrial Inc. China). Then ultrasonic treatment for 30 min
at room temperature. After that, keep the solution at
70 °C in water bath and magnetically stir for
6 h to obtain the modified nanoparticles suspension. The suspension
is then centrifuged (6000 rpm, 6 min) and the
supernatant liquid is removed. Finally the modified nanoparticles are dried at
50 °C in the vacuum oven for 12 h and
grinded into nanoparticles powder.
Synthesis of PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films
Stoichiometric 4,4′-Oxdianline (ODA, Sinopharm Chimical Reagent
Co.,Ltd, China) and the surface modified Al2O3
nanoparticles are added into a certain amount of N,N-Dimethylacetamide (DMAc,
Sinopharm Chimical Reagent Co.,Ltd, China). After ultrasonic treatment for
60 min at room temperature, pyromellitic dianhydride (PMDA,
Sinopharm Chimical Reagent Co.,Ltd, China) is added into the solution and the
mole ratio n (PMDA)/n (ODA) = 1.01. Then magnetically
stir the solution for 6 h to obtain the polyamide acid (PAA)/
nano-Al2O3 composite. To prepare
PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films, a certain amount of
PAA/Al2O3 solution is painted on glasses and degassed
in vacuum. Finally, the samples are putted into a vacuum oven and the thermal
imidization process is: 80 °C - 2 h,
100 °C - 1 h, 140 °C
- 1 h, 180 °C - 1 h,
240 °C - 0.5 h,
300 °C - 0.25 h in turn. The synthesized
nanocomposite films of the thickness between
35 ~ 50 μm are
picked out as the samples of the corona-aging tests while the
175 ~ 350 μm ones
are prepared for the space charge distribution tests (PEA tests) and the trap
level tests (TSC tests).
Characterization
The chemical structure of the PI/Al2O3 nanocomposite films
are analyzed by Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (FT-IR, Thermo Nicolet
5700, USA) between 400 and 4000 cm−1. The
samples are analyzed at 2 cm−1 resolution
and 10 scans co-averaged. Before measuring, the background of the atmosphere is
measured and subtracted from each spectrum.Micro morphology of the films are observed by field emission scanning electron
microscope (FE-SEM, ZEISS Sigma, Germany). Cross-section of the samples for
FE-SEM observation are obtained by brittle fracture in liquid nitrogen. Then the
nano-Al2O3 particles exposed at the cross-section are
eroded by soaking the nanocomposite films in diluted hydrochloric acid
(0.5 mol/L HCl) for 4 hours and the small pits left on
the surface show the size and distribution of the nanoparticles. All the samples
are sputtered with gold on the surfaces to avoid charge accumulation during
observation.
TSC tests
After the long term corona-aging process, the corona-aged films were cleaned with
anhydrous alcohol and then desiccated in the vacuum oven at
120 °C for 2 hours. Before the TSC tests,
the samples are sputtered with gold at two sides of the corona-aged areas. The
tested sample is first polarized under 3 kV/mm at
120 °C for 30 min then cooled down to
−20 °C in the speed of
-10 °C/min. After a delay of 3 min, the
sample is depolarized for 10 min to release the polarization
charges. Finally it is linearly heated in 4 °C/min with
the depolarization current recorded. The thicknesses of the tested
0 wt%, 2 wt% and 5 wt% films are
336 μm, 350 μm and
270 μm for unaged samples,
220 μm, 265 μm and
180 μm for 80 °C long-term
corona-aged samples, 210 μm,
200 μm, and 175 μm for
160 °C long-term corona-aged samples.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Yang, Y. et al. “Thermal
Stabilization Effect” of Al2O3 nano-dopants
improves the high-temperature dielectric performance of polyimide. Sci. Rep.
5, 16986; doi: 10.1038/srep16986 (2015).
Authors: Qi Li; Lei Chen; Matthew R Gadinski; Shihai Zhang; Guangzu Zhang; Haoyu Li; Aman Haque; Long-Qing Chen; Tom Jackson; Qing Wang Journal: Nature Date: 2015-07-30 Impact factor: 49.962