4.7 Article

Surface Modification Using Polydopamine-Coated Liquid Metal Nanocapsules for Improving Performance of Graphene Paper-Based Thermal Interface Materials

Journal

NANOMATERIALS
Volume 11, Issue 5, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/nano11051236

Keywords

liquid metal; graphene paper; surface modification; thermal contact resistance; thermal interface materials

Funding

  1. National Key R&D Program of China [2017YFB0406000]
  2. Project of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDC07030100, XDA22020602, KFZD-SW-409, ZDKYYQ20200001, ZDRW-CN-2019-3]
  3. CAS Youth Innovation Promotion Association [2020301]
  4. Science and Technology Major Project of Ningbo [2018B10046, 2016S1002]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Ningbo [2017A610010]
  6. Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Solid lubrication [LSL-1912]
  7. National Key Laboratory of Science and Technology on Advanced Composites in Special Environments [6142905192806]
  8. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2020M681965]
  9. K.C. Wong Education Foundation [GJTD-2019-13]
  10. 3315 Program of Ningbo

Ask authors/readers for more resources

In order to enhance heat dissipation, a strategy was demonstrated to reduce the thermal contact resistance between graphene paper and the mating surface. By decorating graphene paper with polydopamine EGaIn nanocapsules using a dip-coating process, the thermal contact resistance was decreased, resulting in a 26% improvement in cooling efficiency compared to the undecorated case.
Given the thermal management problem aroused by increasing power densities of electronic components in the system, graphene-based papers have raised considerable interest for applications as thermal interface materials (TIMs) to solve interfacial heat transfer issues. Significant research efforts have focused on enhancing the through-plane thermal conductivity of graphene paper; however, for practical thermal management applications, reducing the thermal contact resistance between graphene paper and the mating surface is also a challenge to be addressed. Here, a strategy aimed at reducing the thermal contact resistance between graphene paper and the mating surface to realize enhanced heat dissipation was demonstrated. For this, graphene paper was decorated with polydopamine EGaIn nanocapsules using a facile dip-coating process. In practical TIM application, there was a decrease in the thermal contact resistance between the TIMs and mating surface after decoration (from 46 to 15 K mm(2) W-1), which enabled the decorated paper to realize a 26% enhancement of cooling efficiency compared with the case without decoration. This demonstrated that this method is a promising route to enhance the heat dissipation capacity of graphene-based TIMs for practical electronic cooling applications.

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