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Faculty of Biology, Chemistry & Earth Sciences

Macromolecular Chemistry II – Prof. Dr. Andreas Greiner (Macromolecular Chemistry & Technology) & Prof. Dr. Seema Agarwal (Advanced Sustainable Polymers)

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Extremely low thermal conductivity and high electrical conductivity of sustainable carbon­ceramic electrospun nonwoven materials

31.03.2023

Liao, Xiaojian ; Denk, Jakob ; Tran, Thomas ; Miyajima, Nobuyoshi ; Benker, Lothar ; Rosenfeldt, Sabine ; Schafföner, Stefan ; Retsch, Markus ; Greiner, Andreas ; Motz, Günter ; Agarwal, Seema

Science Advances 2023 Vol 9, Issue 13. DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.ade6066

Materials with an extremely low thermal and high electrical conductivity that are easy to process, foldable, and nonflammable are required for sustainable applications, notably in energy converters, miniaturized electronics, and high-temperature fuel cells. Given the inherent correlation between high thermal and high electrical conductivity, innovative design concepts that decouple phonon and electron transport are necessary. We achieved this unique combination of thermal conductivity 19.8 ± 7.8 mW/m/K (cross-plane) and 31.8 ± 11.8 mW/m/K (in-plane); electrical conductivity 4.2 S/cm in-plane in electrospun nonwovens comprising carbon as the matrix and silicon-based ceramics as nano-sized inclusions with a sea-island nanostructure. The carbon phase modulates electronic transport for high electrical conductivity, and the ceramic phase induces phonon scattering for low thermal conductivity by excessive boundary scattering. Our strategy can be used to fabricate the unique nonwoven materials for real-world applications and will inspire the design of materials made from carbon and ceramic.

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