| Literature DB >> 35541226 |
Songlin Zhang1,2, Branden E Leonhardt1,3, Nam Nguyen1,2, Abiodun Oluwalowo1,2, Claire Jolowsky1,2, Ayou Hao1,2, Richard Liang1,2, Jin Gyu Park1,2.
Abstract
Large scale manufacturing of electrically conductive carbon nanotube (CNT) sheets with production capability, low cost, and long-term electrical performance stability is still a challenge. A new method to fabricate highly conductive continuous buckypaper (CBP) with roll-to-roll production capability and relatively low cost is reported. The electrical conductivity of CBP can be improved to 7.6 × 104 S m-1 by using an oxidant chemical (i.e. HNO3 and I2) doping method. To compensate for the conductivity degradation caused by the instability of the oxidant chemical doping, a polymer layer of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)-poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) was coated on the chemically doped CBP. The fabricated highly conductive CBP showed stable electrical performance in air for more than a month. This CBP material with high electrical conductivity, relatively low cost, and roll-to-roll manufacturing capability could enable a wide range of engineering applications including flexible conductors, electromagnetic interference (EMI) shielding materials, and electrodes in energy devices. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 35541226 PMCID: PMC9079616 DOI: 10.1039/c8ra01212a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: RSC Adv ISSN: 2046-2069 Impact factor: 3.361
Fig. 1Scalable doping of roll-to-roll continuous buckypaper (CBP): (a) digital image of CBP manufactured at HPMI. (b)–(e) Schematic illustration of different post-treatments: (b) raw CBP as produced with Triton™ X-100 surfactant; (c) heat treated CBP without surfactant; (d) HNO3 and/or iodine doped CBP; (e) chemical doped CBP with PEDOT:PSS coating layer.
Fig. 2Surface morphology of CBP after different post-treatments from SEM images. (a) Raw CBP; (b) heated CBP; (c) HNO3 CBP; (d) I2 CBP; (e) HNO3/I2 CBP. Scale bar in each picture is 200 nm.
Fig. 3Raman spectroscopy of CBP after different post-treatments with D and G band marked as colored area.
The intensity ratio of ID/IG from Raman spectroscopy of CBP after various post-treatments
| Raw CBP | Heated CBP | HNO3 CBP | I2 CBP | HNO3/I2 CBP | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 1.26 | 1.22 | 1.41 | 1.27 | 1.43 |
Fig. 4The TGA and the differential TGA curve of raw CBP and the samples after different post-treatments. The heating rate was 10 °C min−1 from 50–850 °C under air condition.
Fig. 5Electrical conductivity of raw CBPs and the ones with different post-treatments.
Fig. 6Schematic drawing to illustrate the electron transfer efficiency after different post-treatments. Raw CBP with surfactant (a) after heat treatment (b) and chemical doping (c). Contact resistance was expected to be reduced significantly with reduced contact resistance and additional transport path.
Fig. 7(a) TGA data of HNO3/I2 CBP carried in both an air and nitrogen atmospheres. (b) Open air stability of chemically doped CBPs with and without a PEDOT:PSS coating layer. The highly conductive performance of HNO3/I2 CBP w/PEDOT:PSS is stable for more than a month in open air with a relative 3–5% variance. Red dashed line is shown as a guide to the eyes. (c–d) SEM images of PEDOT:PSS coating layer on the surface of CBP: (c) CBP with coating (left) and without coating (right), (d) a fracture and (e) high magnification of dash-line box area in (d).
Fig. 8(a) The mechanical properties of CBP after various post treatments. (b) Tensile strength, failure strain and tensile modulus extracted from the curves in (a).