| Literature DB >> 31362397 |
Oladipo Folorunso1, Yskandar Hamam2,3, Rotimi Sadiku4, Suprakas Sinha Ray5,6, Adekoya Gbolahan Joseph4.
Abstract
The problem associated with mixtures of fillers and polymers is that they result in mechanical degradation of the material (polymer) as the filler content increases. This problem will increase the weight of the material and manufacturing cost. For this reason, experimentation on the electrical conductivities of the polymer-composites (PCs) is not enough to research their electrical properties; models have to be adopted to solve the encountered challenges. Hitherto, several models by previous researchers have been developed and proposed, with each utilizing different design parameters. It is imperative to carry out analysis on these models so that the suitable one is identified. This paper indeed carried out a comprehensive parametric analysis on the existing electrical conductivity models for polymer composites. The analysis involves identification of the parameters that best predict the electrical conductivity of polymer composites for energy storage, viz: (batteries and capacitor), sensors, electronic device components, fuel cell electrodes, automotive, medical instrumentation, cathode scanners, solar cell, and military surveillance gadgets applications. The analysis showed that the existing models lack sufficient parametric ability to determine accurately the electrical conductivity of polymer-composites.Entities:
Keywords: conductivity; electrical; fillers; models; percolation; polymers
Year: 2019 PMID: 31362397 PMCID: PMC6722708 DOI: 10.3390/polym11081250
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Polymers (Basel) ISSN: 2073-4360 Impact factor: 4.329
Figure 1The percolation regions of conducting polymer composites [16].
Energy level applications in conductive polymer-composites.
| Application | Energy State | Resistivity Value ( |
|---|---|---|
| As conductors: | Highly Conductive | |
| i. Transistors | ||
| ii. Bipolar plates | ||
| iii. Thermoelectric plates | ||
| iv. Busbars etc. | ||
| As Sensors and EMI | Conductive | 10– |
| i. Displacement sensors | ||
| ii. Current sensor | ||
| iii. Voltage sensors | ||
| iv. Temperature sensors | ||
| v. Organic liquid sensor | ||
| etc | ||
| Electroplating | Insulator/Conductive | |
| i.Fuel tank | ||
| ii. Anti-static storage tank | ||
| iii. Mining pipes | ||
| iv. Storage containers | ||
| etc. | ||
| Perfect insulator | Insulator | |
| i. Electric cable insulator | ||
| etc. |
Experimental composite characteristics values [14].
| Comp-Site | log | log | log |
| F | t |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ER-Cu | −12.8 | −12.5 | 5.2 | 0.05 | 0.30 | 2.9 |
| PVC-Cu | −13.5 | −13.2 | 5.8 | 0.05 | 0.30 | 3.2 |
| ER-Ni | −12.8 | −12.0 | 4.8 | 0.09 | 0.51 | 2.4 |
| PVC-Ni | −13.5 | −13.3 | 4.5 | 0.04 | 0.25 |
Figure 2Exponential curve of the electrical conductivity of a 60:40 ratio mixture of NG/PF [29].
Figure 3Monte Carlo method flow chart process.
Figure 4Typical composite: randomly moving in a Representative Volume Element (RVE) with orientation angle .
Figure 5Simoidal function for predicting electrical conductivity of polymer-composites [16].
Parameters concerned for the models discussed.
| S/N | Model | Parameters | Short-Coming | Filler/Matrix | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shapes, orientation, | [ | ||||
| Weber | fiber concentration, | Degree of orientation | MCF/PP, Graphite/epoxy, | [ | |
| 1 | (FCM, and MFCM) | average length | difficult to measure | CF/PP-P | [ |
| It does not account for | |||||
| for i. particle shape, | [ | ||||
| Carrier tunneling | ii. Interaction between | Silver-filled polymer, | [ | ||
| 2 | Power Law | and critical exponent | polymer and filler | Nb-alumina | [ |
| It has not being fully | |||||
| 3 | Eight Chain | Volume fraction | investigated by researchers. | MWCNT/PDMS | [ |
| [ | |||||
| Volume fraction, shape, | Unable to predict EC of CF/PP | [ | |||
| size, aspect critical | due to orientation at the | CF/PP, CB/PVC, | [ | ||
| 4 | McLachlan (GEM) | value, orientation angle | transverse direction. | PPy/PMMA | [ |
| Critical exponential, | |||||
| orientation and | Insufficient defined | CB,CF | [ | ||
| 5 | Modified McLachlan | shape of filler | parameters | Pheno formaldehyde/NG, | [ |
| Packing factor, aspect ratio, | CF/nylon 6,6-polycarbonate, | [ | |||
| surface energy of Filler and | Insufficient defined | CB/polymer, | [ | ||
| 6 | Mamunya | polymer, particle shape | parameters | Cu/ER-PVC, Ni-ER-PVC, PPy/PMMA | [ |
| [ | |||||
| Surface energy | Not suitable for | [ | |||
| 7 | Clingerman | and geometry of filler | multifiller system | CB/PMMA | [ |
| Contact resistance, | |||||
| Alignment angle, | |||||
| geometrical parameters, | Not suitable for | MWCNT/polymer, MWCNT/PDMS, | [ | ||
| 8 | Monte Carlo | dispersed conductivity | multifiller system | CNT/polymer, Ag/epoxy | [ |
| Not suitable for | |||||
| 9 | Maxwell | Filler diameter | multifiller system | Various polymer-composites | [ |
| Not suitable for | |||||
| 10 | Maxwell–Wagner | Particle size | multifiller system | Various polymer-composites | [ |
| Volume fraction, conductivity | Not suitable for | ||||
| 11 | Pal | of filler and polymer | multifiller system | Various polymer-composites | [ |
| filller, polymer | |||||
| conductivity, and filler | Fitting the model is | EVA/carbon fiber, | [ | ||
| 12 | Sigmoidal | volume fraction | quite challenging | NBR/carbon black | [ |
Figure 6Particle size versus volume fraction [47].
Relationship between aspect ratio and conductivity [60].
| Material | Aspect Ration | Resistivity |
|---|---|---|
| VGCF | 350–650 | 55 |
| xGnP-1 | 100 | 100 |
| PAN | 24 | 1400 |