Abstract

Graphene-based materials have great application prospects in the thermal management field due to their high intrinsic thermal conductivity. Understanding the factors affecting the thermal conductivity of graphene and graphene-based materials is essential for further application of the materials. This study aims to explore the effect of graphene oxide (GO) nanosheet size on its intrinsic thermal conductivity experimentally. By simultaneously characterizing the morphology and thermal conductivity of the nanosheet, an obvious size dependence of thermal conductivity is observed: larger-sized GO nanosheets are preferred to have higher thermal conductivity values. Further detailed morphology and structural analysis identify that this dependence is caused by morphological defects. In addition, whether this dependence at the microscale still exists in practical GO-based materials is also studied. The characterization of thermal conductivity and thermal management performance for macroscopic materials confirms this inheritability. This work clarifies the dependence and its generation principle of thermal conductivity on the GO nanosheet size, meanwhile, it also proves that this dependence still exists when microscopic nanosheets are integrated into macroscopic systems.

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