Multifunctional Biocomposites based on Polyhydroxyalkanoate and Graphene/Carbon-Nanofiber Hybrids for Electrical and Thermal Applications
Pietro Cataldi, Pietro Steiner, Thomas Raine, Kailing Lin, Coskun, Kocabas, Robert J. Young, Mark Bissett, Ian A. Kinloch, Dimitrios G., Papageorgiou

TL;DR
This study develops PHA-based nanocomposites with graphene and carbon nanofibers, enhancing their thermal, electrical, and mechanical properties for sustainable electrical and thermal applications.
Contribution
It introduces a solvent-free, industrially compatible method to create multifunctional PHA nanocomposites with improved properties using hybrid graphene and carbon nanofiber fillers.
Findings
Young's modulus roughly doubled
Electrical conductivity increased by ~6 times at 15 wt.% loading
Electromagnetic interference shielding effectiveness exceeded 20 dB
Abstract
Most polymers are long-lasting and produced from monomers derived from fossil fuel sources. Bio-based and/or biodegradable plastics have been proposed as a sustainable alternative. Amongst those available, polyhydroxyalkanoate (PHA) shows great potential across a large variety of applications but is currently limited to packaging, cosmetics and tissue engineering due to its relatively poor physical properties. An expansion of its uses can be accomplished by developing nanocomposites where PHAs are used as the polymer matrix. Herein, a PHA biopolyester was melt blended with graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs) or with a 1:1 hybrid mixture of GNPs and carbon nanofibers (CNFs). The resulting nanocomposites exhibited enhanced thermal stability while their Young's modulus roughly doubled compared to pure PHA. The hybrid nanocomposites percolated electrically at lower nanofiller loadings compared to…
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