posted on 2017-09-29, 00:00authored byIvan V. Lounev, Delyus R. Musin, Ayrat M. Dimiev
The
difference between intact and longitudinally opened multiwalled
carbon nanotubes (referred to as CNT and OCNT) has been studied in
their application as conductive filler in polymer composite materials.
The dielectric properties have been studied in a broad frequency range
at the temperatures varying from 293 K through 373 K. Introduction
of as little as 0.5% and 1.0% of the conductive filler dramatically
increased both parts of the complex permittivity. The percolation
threshold is registered at ∼1.5% filling fraction. The main
frequency dispersion of the dielectric permittivity lies in the low
frequency end of the tested spectrum: from 102 Hz through
104 Hz. At equal filling fractions, the permittivity of
the OCNT-based samples exceeds that of the intact CNT-based samples.
The relaxation dynamics is largely affected by the nanoscale geometry
of the filler: the temperature dependence of such parameters as dielectric
strength, activation energy, and relaxation time demonstrated significant
difference between the charge transfer mechanism in the CNT-based
and OCNT-based samples. The obtained activation energy is 150 and
85 kJ/mol for materials comprising CNTs and OCNTs, respectively. The
relaxation mechanism is complex, and the exact factors behind the
macroscopic dielectric properties of the tested materials cannot be
singled out with certainty. Several experimental data points suggest
that the individual nanotubes, not their aggregates, play the major
role in the observed electrical properties of the composites. At the
low loading fractions, we attained the highest dielectric strength
values among all the data reported by the present day for the CNT/polymer
host systems.