Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics

Abstract In the present work, carbon nanotube (CNT)‐reinforced alumina nanocomposite ceramics were investigated about their electrical and, for the first time in such detail, thermal conductivity. Therefore, two different alumina powders with varying CNT‐contents were processed by pressureless sinte...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Christian Bechteler, Lisa Machuj, Kilian Hebendanz, Achim Rübling, Ralf Girmscheid, Hannes Kühl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2023-01-01
Series:International Journal of Ceramic Engineering & Science
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ces2.10167
_version_ 1797944606056251392
author Christian Bechteler
Lisa Machuj
Kilian Hebendanz
Achim Rübling
Ralf Girmscheid
Hannes Kühl
author_facet Christian Bechteler
Lisa Machuj
Kilian Hebendanz
Achim Rübling
Ralf Girmscheid
Hannes Kühl
author_sort Christian Bechteler
collection DOAJ
description Abstract In the present work, carbon nanotube (CNT)‐reinforced alumina nanocomposite ceramics were investigated about their electrical and, for the first time in such detail, thermal conductivity. Therefore, two different alumina powders with varying CNT‐contents were processed by pressureless sintering and hot pressing to achieve CNT/alumina composite ceramics with varying porosity and CNT‐content between 0 and 5 wt.% CNTs. A significant influence of the grain size on percolation threshold of the electrical conductivity was detected. The coarser CT 3000 SG‐based ceramic showed a threshold of <0.25 wt.%, which is the lowest reported threshold in literature. Pore orientation in the hot‐pressed materials shows a significant influence on the electrical and thermal conductivity of the composite, causing anisotropic properties. Both, electrical and thermal conductivity are higher parallel to the pore structure and perpendicular to the press‐direction, respectively, with electrical conductivity being up to three times and thermal conductivity up to 30% higher parallel to the pore structure. Unlike electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity decreases significantly with increasing CNT‐content. As two influences, CNT‐content and porosity, interact, each of them was analyzed separately in order to measure the isolated influence of CNT‐content on thermal conductivity at constant porosity. It was shown, that thermal conductivity decreases considerably with increasing CNT‐content even at constant porosity, because of a disturbed crystal structure due to a finer grain structure with more grain boundaries. This behavior is contrary to the expected, and sometimes reported, effect of CNTs. The combination of an increasing CNT‐content and the related increase in porosity causes a strongly decreasing thermal conductivity of the material from 35 W/m∙K for pure alumina to 10 W/m∙K for alumina with 5 wt.% CNTs. The presented results in this and other previously published investigations from the authors show that CNT/alumina‐nanocomposites have the potential of combining outstanding mechanical properties and electrical conductivity, which can be used as high performance electrically conductive ceramic material for a wide range of applications.
first_indexed 2024-04-10T20:42:24Z
format Article
id doaj.art-29f1c1df21fa42b0a03149239d8672fc
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 2578-3270
language English
last_indexed 2024-04-10T20:42:24Z
publishDate 2023-01-01
publisher Wiley
record_format Article
series International Journal of Ceramic Engineering & Science
spelling doaj.art-29f1c1df21fa42b0a03149239d8672fc2023-01-24T17:28:44ZengWileyInternational Journal of Ceramic Engineering & Science2578-32702023-01-0151n/an/a10.1002/ces2.10167Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramicsChristian Bechteler0Lisa Machuj1Kilian Hebendanz2Achim Rübling3Ralf Girmscheid4Hannes Kühl5Technische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm Nürnberg GermanyTechnische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm Nürnberg GermanyTechnische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm Nürnberg GermanyTechnische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm Nürnberg GermanyRauschert Heinersdorf‐Pressig GmbH Pressig GermanyTechnische Hochschule Nürnberg Georg Simon Ohm Nürnberg GermanyAbstract In the present work, carbon nanotube (CNT)‐reinforced alumina nanocomposite ceramics were investigated about their electrical and, for the first time in such detail, thermal conductivity. Therefore, two different alumina powders with varying CNT‐contents were processed by pressureless sintering and hot pressing to achieve CNT/alumina composite ceramics with varying porosity and CNT‐content between 0 and 5 wt.% CNTs. A significant influence of the grain size on percolation threshold of the electrical conductivity was detected. The coarser CT 3000 SG‐based ceramic showed a threshold of <0.25 wt.%, which is the lowest reported threshold in literature. Pore orientation in the hot‐pressed materials shows a significant influence on the electrical and thermal conductivity of the composite, causing anisotropic properties. Both, electrical and thermal conductivity are higher parallel to the pore structure and perpendicular to the press‐direction, respectively, with electrical conductivity being up to three times and thermal conductivity up to 30% higher parallel to the pore structure. Unlike electrical conductivity, thermal conductivity decreases significantly with increasing CNT‐content. As two influences, CNT‐content and porosity, interact, each of them was analyzed separately in order to measure the isolated influence of CNT‐content on thermal conductivity at constant porosity. It was shown, that thermal conductivity decreases considerably with increasing CNT‐content even at constant porosity, because of a disturbed crystal structure due to a finer grain structure with more grain boundaries. This behavior is contrary to the expected, and sometimes reported, effect of CNTs. The combination of an increasing CNT‐content and the related increase in porosity causes a strongly decreasing thermal conductivity of the material from 35 W/m∙K for pure alumina to 10 W/m∙K for alumina with 5 wt.% CNTs. The presented results in this and other previously published investigations from the authors show that CNT/alumina‐nanocomposites have the potential of combining outstanding mechanical properties and electrical conductivity, which can be used as high performance electrically conductive ceramic material for a wide range of applications.https://doi.org/10.1002/ces2.10167aluminacarbon nanotubeelectrical propertiesnanocompositethermal properties
spellingShingle Christian Bechteler
Lisa Machuj
Kilian Hebendanz
Achim Rübling
Ralf Girmscheid
Hannes Kühl
Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
International Journal of Ceramic Engineering & Science
alumina
carbon nanotube
electrical properties
nanocomposite
thermal properties
title Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
title_full Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
title_fullStr Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
title_full_unstemmed Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
title_short Electrical and thermal conductivity of CNT/alumina‐nanocomposite ceramics
title_sort electrical and thermal conductivity of cnt alumina nanocomposite ceramics
topic alumina
carbon nanotube
electrical properties
nanocomposite
thermal properties
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ces2.10167
work_keys_str_mv AT christianbechteler electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics
AT lisamachuj electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics
AT kilianhebendanz electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics
AT achimrubling electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics
AT ralfgirmscheid electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics
AT hanneskuhl electricalandthermalconductivityofcntaluminananocompositeceramics