posted on 2024-10-24, 14:35authored byPeiChi Liao, Haichang Guo, Hongyu Niu, Ruijie Li, Ge Yin, Lei Kang, Liuchen Ren, Ruicong Lv, Huifeng Tian, Shizhuo Liu, Zhixin Yao, Zhenjiang Li, Yihan Wang, Lina Yang Zhang, U Sasaki, Wenxi Li, Yijie Luo, Junjie Guo, Zhi Xu, Lifen Wang, Ruqiang Zou, Shulin Bai, Lei Liu
The rapid development of modern electronic
devices increasingly
requires thermal management materials with controllable electrical
properties, ranging from conductive and dielectric to insulating,
to meet the needs of diverse applications. However, highly thermally
conductive materials usually have a high electrical conductivity.
Intrinsically highly thermally conductive, but electrically insulating
materials are still limited to a few kinds of materials. To overcome
the electrical-thermal conductance trade-off, here, we report a facile
Pechini-based method to prepare multiple core (metal)/shell (metal
oxide) engineered fillers, such as aluminum-oxide-coated and beryllium-oxide-coated
Ag microspheres. In contrast to the previous in situ growth method which mainly focused on small-sized spheres with specific
coating materials, our method combined with ultrafast joule heating
treatment is more versatile and robust for varied-sized, especially
large-sized core–shell fillers. Through size compounding, the
as-synthesized core–shell-filled epoxy composites exhibit high
isotropic thermal conductivity (∼3.8 W m–1 K–1) while maintaining high electrical resistivity
(∼1012 Ω cm) and good flowability, showing
better heat dissipation properties than commercial thermally conductive
packaging materials. The successful preparation of these core–shell
fillers endows thermally conductive composites with controlled electrical
properties for emerging electronic package applications, as demonstrated
in circuit board and battery thermal management.