| Literature DB >> 35494602 |
Fujia Chen1, Yujiu Zhou1, Jimin Guo1, Song Sun1, Yuetao Zhao2, Yajie Yang1, Jianhua Xu1.
Abstract
High performance dielectric polymer materials are a key point for energy storage capacitors, especially film capacitors. In this paper, a sandwich-structured polymer film is constructed to achieve high energy density and high efficiency. High dielectric materials of poly(vinylidene fluoride-hexafluoropropylene) (P(VDF-HFP)) doped with barium titanate (BaTiO3) are used as the outer layer to achieve a high dielectric constant, and a boron nitride nanosheet (BNNS) layer is inserted between P(VDF-HFP)/BaTiO3 to obtain a high breakdown field strength of composite films. The results indicate that when the doping amount of the BaTiO3 nanoparticles reaches 10 wt% and the mass fraction of the BNNS layer is 0.75 wt%, a significant improvement of energy storage performance is obtained. The energy storage density of the P(VDF-HFP)/BaTiO3/BNNSs composite film can reach 8.37 J cm-3, which is higher than 6.65 J cm-3 of the pure P(VDF-HFP) film. Compared with the P(VDF-HFP) film doped with BaTiO3, significant improvement of the breakdown field strength (about 148.5%) is achieved and the energy storage density increases 235% accordingly, resulting from the inserted BNNSs layer blocking the growth of electrical branches and suppressing leakage current. This novel sandwich-structured film shows promising future applications for high performance dielectric capacitors. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2020 PMID: 35494602 PMCID: PMC9048770 DOI: 10.1039/c9ra09780e
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Experimental flow chart: surface modification of BaTiO3 by dopamine, preparation of BNNSs and fabrication of sandwich structure film.
Fig. 2Micromorphology of BNNSs: (a) AFM image, (b) TEM characterization images and (c) the thickness of a piece of BNNSs intercepted.
Fig. 3SEM images of film cross section: (a) P(VDF-HFP)/BT, (b) P(VDF-HFP)/BT@DPA, (c) HFP/BT@DPA/BNNSs and (d) PBP/BT@DPA.
Fig. 4Dielectric spectrogram: relationship between dielectric constant and dielectric loss (tan δ) as a function of frequency.
Fig. 5(a) Weibull distribution, (b) shape factor β, (c) storage density of films under different electric field strengths and (d) the storage density of the films under the maximum breakdown field strength.
Comparison of dielectric constant, electric field and energy density
| Materials |
|
|
| References |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| PBP/BT@DPA | 10.99 | 414.76 | 8.37 | This work |
| Polypropylene (PP) | 2.2 | 640 | 1–1.2 |
|
| Polyester (PET) | 3.3 | 570 | 1–1.5 |
|
| Polycarbonate (PC) | 2.8 | 528 | 0.5–1 |
|
| PVDF | 8 | 400 | 2.8 |
|
| PVDF/BST-NPs | 36 | 250 | 3.9 |
|
| 8 wt% BNNSs/PVDF | 8.3 | 486 | 7.25 |
|
| 0.5 wt% BaTiO3@BNNSs/PVDF | 12.5 | 350 | 7 |
|
| 7 vol% Fe3O4@BNNSs/PVDF | 16 | 300 | 7.1 |
|
| 7.5 vol% F–TiO2/P(VDF-HFP) | 12 | 160 | 1.4 |
|
| 5 vol% BaTiO3@PMPCS/P(VDF-HFP) | 20 | 300 | 7.5 |
|
| 0.4 wt% BNNSs/P(VDF-CTFE) | 23 | 300 | 6.8 |
|
Fig. 6(a) Charge–discharge efficiency and (b) insulation resistivity.