4.8 Article

Electrically Conductive Polypropylene Nanocomposites with Negative Permittivity at Low Carbon Nanotube Loading Levels

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 7, Issue 11, Pages 6125-6138

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am5082183

Keywords

polypropylene nanocomposites; percolation value; crystal phases; viscosity; band gap; negative permittivity

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CMMI 10-30755]
  2. American Chemical Society Petroleum Research Fund (ACS PRF) [53930-ND6]
  3. Welch Foundation [V-0004]

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Polypropylene (PP)/carbon nanotubes (CNTs) nanocomposites were prepared by coating CNTs on the surface of gelated/swollen soft PP pellets. The electrical conductivity (sigma) studies revealed a percolation threshold of only 0.3 wt %, and the electrical conductivity mechanism followed a 3-d variable range hopping (VRH) behavior. At lower processing temperature, the CNTs formed the network structure more easily, resulting in a higher sigma. The fraction of gamma-phase PP increased with increasing the pressing ternperature. The CNTs at lower loading (0.1 wt %) served as nucleating sites and promoted the crystallization of PP. The CNTs favored the disentanglement of polymer chains and thus caused an even lower melt viscosity of nanocomposites than that of pure PP. The calculated optical band gap of CNTs was observed to increase with increasing the processing temperature, i.e., 1.55 eV for nanocomposites prepared at 120 degrees C and 1.70 eV prepared at 160 and 180 degrees C. Both the Drude model and interband transition phenomenon have been used for theoretical analysis of the real permittivity of the nanocomposites.

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