A comparative study of auxiliary intercalating agents on thermal conductivity of expanded graphite/polyetherimide composite
Fatema Tarannum, Swapneel Danayat, Avinash Nayal, Rajmohan Muthaiah,, Roshan Sameer Annam, Jivtesh Garg

TL;DR
This study demonstrates that using hydrogen peroxide as an auxiliary intercalating agent significantly enhances the thermal conductivity of expanded graphite/polyetherimide composites by creating an interconnected graphene network, achieving a 4030% increase.
Contribution
It is the first comprehensive comparison of auxiliary intercalating agents' effects on thermal conductivity in expanded graphite/polymer composites, highlighting hydrogen peroxide's effectiveness.
Findings
Hydrogen peroxide leads to a 4030% increase in thermal conductivity.
NaClO3 results in a 2190% increase, less effective than H2O2.
H2O2 preserves graphene's in-plane thermal conductivity (~2000 W/m·K).
Abstract
In this work, we have comprehensively studied the effect of auxiliary intercalating agents on the thermal conductivity of expanded graphite (EG) polymer composites. We report an ultra-high enhancement of 4030% in thermal conductivity of polyetherimide/graphene nanocomposite (k = 9.5 Wm-1K-1) prepared through the use of EG with hydrogen peroxide (H2O2) as an auxiliary intercalating agent at 10 wt% compositions (k of pure polyetherimide ~ 0.23 Wm-1K-1). This ultra-high thermal conductivity value is found to be due to an EG-mediated interconnected graphene network throughout the composite, establishing a percolative environment that enables highly efficient thermal transport in the composite. Comparative studies were also performed using sodium chlorate (NaClO3) as an auxiliary intercalating agent. At 10 wt% composition, NaClO3 intercalated EG was found to lead to a smaller enhancement of…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
Taxonomy
TopicsThermal properties of materials · Graphene research and applications · Fiber-reinforced polymer composites
