Interfacial heat flow in carbon nanotube suspensions
Top Cited Papers
- 12 October 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Materials
- Vol. 2 (11) , 731-734
- https://doi.org/10.1038/nmat996
Abstract
The enormous amount of basic research into carbon nanotubes has sparked interest in the potential applications of these novel materials. One promising use of carbon nanotubes is as fillers in a composite material to improve mechanical behaviour1,2, electrical transport3,4 and thermal transport5,6. For composite materials with high thermal conductivity, the thermal conductance across the nanotube–matrix interface is of particular interest. Here we use picosecond transient absorption to measure the interface thermal conductance (G) of carbon nanotubes suspended in surfactant micelles in water. Classical molecular dynamics simulations of heat transfer from a carbon nanotube to a model hydrocarbon liquid are in agreement with experiment. Our findings indicate that heat transport in a nanotube composite material will be limited by the exceptionally small interface thermal conductance (G ≈ 12 MW m−2 K−1) and that the thermal conductivity of the composite will be much lower than the value estimated from the intrinsic thermal conductivity of the nanotubes and their volume fraction.Keywords
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