| Literature DB >> 26899682 |
Pengfei Li1, Sui Yang2, Teng Zhang3, Ramesh Shrestha1, Kedar Hippalgaonkar4, Tengfei Luo3, Xiang Zhang2,5, Sheng Shen1.
Abstract
Crystalline polymers have attracted significant interest in recent years due to their enhanced mechanical and thermal properties. As one type of organic-inorganic hybrid polymer crystals, polysilsesquioxane can be synthesized by large-scale and inexpensive so-gel processes with two precursors. In this paper, both octylene-bridged and hexylene-bridged PSQ crystals are characterized with infrared spectroscopy and X-ray crystallography to reveal their super high crystallinity. To study the thermal transport in these unique polymer crystals, we use a suspended micro thermal device to examine their thermal properties from 20 K to 320 K, and demonstrate their tunable thermal conductivity by varying the length of alkyl chains. We also conduct non-equilibrium molecular dynamics simulations to study the phonon behaviors across the hydrogen bond interface. The simulation results demonstrate good agreement with the experimental results regarding both the value and trend of the PSQ thermal conductivity. Furthermore, from the simulation, we find that the anharmonic phonon scattering and interfacial anharmnic coupling effects across the hydrogen bond interface may explain the experimentally observed thermal properties.Entities:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26899682 PMCID: PMC4761904 DOI: 10.1038/srep21452
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Figure 12D projection graphs of repeating units of (a) octylene-bridged and (b) hexylene-bridged PSQ beams. Dark-field optical images of PSQ products: (c) crystalline and (e) amorphous octylene-bridged PSQ micro beams; (d) crystalline and (f) amorphous hexylene -bridged PSQ micro beams. Scale bars in (c,d) are 2 μm, and 3 mm in (e,f).
Figure 2FTIR and X-ray characterizations of PSQ hybrid crystals.
(a) FTIR spectra of crystalline and amorphous bridged octylene-bridged PSQ. (b) Powder X-ray diffraction pattern of octylene-bridged PSQ fibers.
Figure 3Thermal characterizations of PSQ hybrid crystals.
(a) Optical image of a PSQ crystal beam placed on a suspended micro device with built-in platinum resistance thermometers. The scale bar is 2 μm. (b) The total thermal resistance measured versus L/A in 5 samples at 50 K and 300 K. (c) Thermal conductivity of the two types of PSQ beams at temperatures from 10 K to 320 K.
Initial structure and optimized structure for hexylene-bridged (“C6”) and octylene-bridged (“C8”) PSQ crystals.
a = OA, b = OB, c = OC. α = ∠BOC, β = ∠COA, γ = ∠AOB.
Figure 4A representative NEMD setup for thermal conductivity calculation.
Thermal conductivity of PSQ beams with different molecular backbone lengths at 300 K.
| Beam type | Thermal conductivity (W/mK) |
|---|---|
| PSQ-C8 | 1.39 ± 0.09 |
| PSQ-C6 | 1.21 ± 0.03 |
Figure 5A compare between simulation results and experiment results.
(a) Simulated thermal conductivity of PSQ-C6 as a function of the beam Length. (b) Simulated thermal conductivity of PSQ-C6 from 200 K to 400 K. (c) Measured thermal conductivities of PSQ-C6 and PSQ-C8 in the temperature range from 250 K to 310 K.