Large enhancement in thermal conductivity of solvent cast expanded-graphite/polyetherimide composites
Fatema Tarannum, Swapneel Danayat, Avinash Nayal, Rajmohan Muthaiah,, Jivtesh Garg

TL;DR
This paper reports a significant increase in thermal conductivity of polyetherimide composites with expanded graphite, achieving over 2700% enhancement due to a continuous graphene network formed via solvent casting.
Contribution
It introduces a solvent casting method that preserves expanded graphite structure, enabling highly thermally conductive graphene-polymer composites with a novel network architecture.
Findings
Thermal conductivity of 6.56 W/mK at 10 wt% EG
2770% enhancement over pristine polymer
Efficient heat transfer due to covalently bonded graphene network
Abstract
We demonstrate in this work, that expanded graphite (EG) can lead to a very large enhancement in thermal conductivity of polyetherimide-graphene and epoxy-graphene nanocomposites prepared via solvent casting technique. A k value of 6.56 Wm-1K-1 is achieved for 10 weight % composition sample, representing an enhancement of ~2770% over pristine polyetherimide (k ~ 0.23 Wm-1K-1). This extraordinary enhancement in thermal conductivity is shown to be due to a network of continuous graphene sheets over long length scales, resulting in low thermal contact resistance at bends/turns due to the graphene sheets being covalently bonded at such junctions. Solvent casting offers the advantage of preserving the porous structure of expanded graphite in the composite, resulting in the above highly thermally conductive interpenetrating network of graphene and polymer. Solvent casting also does not break…
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Taxonomy
TopicsThermal properties of materials · Graphene research and applications · Membrane Separation and Gas Transport
