Thermal conductivity and interfacial resistance in single-wall carbon nanotube epoxy composites

Abstract

We report thermal conductivity measurements of purified single-wall carbon nanotube (SWNT) epoxy composites prepared using suspensions of SWNTs in N-N-Dimethylformamide (DMF) and surfactant stabilized aqueous SWNT suspensions. Thermal conductivity enhancement is observed in both types of composites. DMF-processed composites show an advantage at SWNT volume fractions between phi similar to 0.001 to 0.005. Surfactant processed samples, however, permit greater SWNT loading and exhibit larger overall enhancement (64 +/- 9)% at phi similar to 0.1. The enhancement differences are attributed to a ten-fold larger SWNT/solid-composite interfacial thermal resistance in the surfactant-processed composites compared to DMF-processed composites. The interfacial resistance is extracted from the volume fraction dependence of the thermal conductivity data using effective medium theory. [C. W. Nan, G. Liu, Y. Lin, and M. Li, Appl. Phys. Lett. 85, 3549 (2004)]. (C) 2005 American Institute of Physics.

Publication
Applied Physics Letters
Dan Milkie
Dan Milkie
Senior Scientist

My research interests include microscopy, accelerating experiments with software.