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Origin of high thermal conductivity in disentangled ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene films: ballistic phonons within enlarged crystals

Cited 14 time in Web of Science Cited 15 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Taeyong; Drakopoulos, Stavros X.; Ronca, Sara; Minnich, Austin J.

Issue Date
2022-05
Publisher
Nature Publishing Group
Citation
Nature Communications, Vol.13 No.1, p. 2452
Abstract
The thermal transport properties of oriented polymers are of fundamental and practical interest. High thermal conductivities (greater than or similar to 50 Wm(-1)K(-1)) have recently been reported in disentangled ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene (UHMWPE) films, considerably exceeding prior reported values for oriented films. However, conflicting explanations have been proposed for the microscopic origin of the high thermal conductivity. Here, we report a characterization of the thermal conductivity and mean free path accumulation function of disentangled UHMWPE films (draw ratio similar to 200) using cryogenic steady-state thermal conductivity measurements and transient grating spectroscopy. We observe a marked dependence of the thermal conductivity on grating period over temperatures from 30-300 K. Considering this observation, cryogenic bulk thermal conductivity measurements, and analysis using an anisotropic Debye model, we conclude that longitudinal atomic vibrations with mean free paths around 400 nanometers are the primary heat carriers, and that the high thermal conductivity for draw ratio greater than or similar to 150 arises from the enlargement of extended crystals with drawing. The mean free paths appear to remain limited by the extended crystal dimensions, suggesting that the upper limit of thermal conductivity of disentangled UHMWPE films has not yet been realized.
ISSN
2041-1723
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/201244
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-29904-2
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  • College of Engineering
  • Department of Mechanical Engineering
Research Area Radiative cooling, Thermal conduction in materials, Ultrafast optical spectroscopy and ultrafast electron microscopy, 복사 냉각, 열 전도 물성 분석 및 방열 소재 개발, 초고속 레이저 분광학 및 전자현미경

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