4.4 Article

Enhanced thermal conductivity of epoxy/alumina composite through multiscale-disperse packing

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPOSITE MATERIALS
Volume 55, Issue 1, Pages 17-25

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/0021998320942575

Keywords

Thermal conductivity; epoxy composite; particle size distribution; multiscale dispersing

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The study demonstrates that using spherical particles of different size scales can significantly increase the loading fraction of fillers in epoxy-based composites and enhance thermal conductivity. Both DEM and PTM models provide good predictions in the high volume fraction regime, and thermal conductivity can be further improved by filling higher thermal conductivity spherical fillers and reducing the effect of cure shrinkage.
Inspired by the size of the voids in closest packing structures, we propose to use the combination of spherical particles with different size scales to increase the loading fraction of the fillers in epoxy-based composites. In this study, high loading up to 79 vol% has been achieved with multiscale particle sizes of spherical Al(2)O(3)particles. The highest thermal conductivity of Al2O3-filled liquid epoxy measured by steady-state method is 6.7 W m(-1)K(-1)at 25 degrees C, which is approximately 23 times higher than the neat epoxy (0.28 W m(-1)K(-1)). Three models based on Maxwell mean-field scheme (MMF), differential effective medium (DEM) and percolation theory model (PTM) were utilized to assess our measured thermal conductivity data. We found that both DEM and PTM models could give good results at high volume fraction regime. We have also observed a considerable reduction (10-15%) of thermal conductivity in our Al2O3-filled cured epoxy samples. We attribute this reduction to the increasing of thermal interfacial resistance between Al(2)O(3)particles and cured epoxy matrix, induced by cure shrinkage during the reaction. Our experiments have demonstrated that systems with multiscale particle sizes exhibit lower viscosity and can be filled with much higher fraction of fillers. We thus expect that higher thermal conductivity (probably >12 W m(-1)K(-1)based on DEM) can be achieved in future via filling higher thermal conductivity spherical fillers (e.g., AlN, SiC), increasing loading fraction by multiscale-disperse packing and reducing the effect from cure shrinkage.

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