4.8 Article

Explosive percolation yields highly-conductive polymer nanocomposites

Journal

NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-34631-9

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union [642742]
  2. EPSRC [EP/S018069/1]
  3. Spanish MCIN/AEI [PID2019-104272RB-C51/AEI/10.13039/501100011033]
  4. Government of Aragon (DGA) [T03-20R]

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This study demonstrates the use of explosive percolation to achieve a low-loading composite material with enhanced electrical properties by in-situ reduction of graphene oxide. The authors show that the materials with correlated localisation of percolating particles and emergent conductive paths can realize sharp transitions and high conductivities characteristic of the explosively-grown network.
Explosive percolation is an experimentally-elusive phenomenon where network connectivity coincides with onset of an additional modification of the system; materials with correlated localisation of percolating particles and emergent conductive paths can realise sharp transitions and high conductivities characteristic of the explosively-grown network. Nanocomposites present a structurally- and chemically-varied playground to realise explosive percolation in practically-applicable systems but this is yet to be exploited by design. Herein, we demonstrate composites of graphene oxide and synthetic polymer latex which form segregated networks, leading to low percolation threshold and localisation of conductive pathways. In situ reduction of the graphene oxide at temperatures of <150 degrees C drives chemical modification of the polymer matrix to produce species with phenolic groups, which are known crosslinking agents. This leads to conductivities exceeding those of dense-packed networks of reduced graphene oxide, illustrating the potential of explosive percolation by design to realise low-loading composites with dramatically-enhanced electrical transport properties. Materials with correlated localisation of percolating particles and emergent conductive paths can realise sharp transitions and high conductivities characteristic of the explosively-grown network. Here the authors exploit explosive percolation to realize a low-loading composite material with enhanced electrical properties by in-situ reduction of graphene oxide.

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