Abstract

Carbon nanotube (CNT), has been demonstrated as a promising high-value product from thermal chemical conversion of waste plastics and securing new applications is an important prerequisite for large-scale production of CNT from waste-plastic recycling. In this study, CNT, produced from waste plastic through chemical vapor deposition (pCNT), was applied as a nanofiller in phase change material (PCM), affording pCNT-PCM composites. Compared with pure PCM, the addition of 5.0 wt% pCNT rendered the peak melting temperature increase by 1.3 ℃, latent heat retain by 90.7%, and thermal conductivity increase by 104%. The results of morphological analysis and leakage testing confirmed that pCNT has similar PCM encapsulation performance and shape stability to those of commercial CNT. The formation of uniform pCNT cluster networks allowed for a large CNT loading into the PCM on the premise of free phase change, responsible for the high thermal conductivity inside the homogeneous phase. Thus, the resulting capillary forces retained a high latent heat capacity and suitable melting temperature and prohibited PCM leakage from the matrix to the outside during re-melting as the pCNT loading ratio increased. Therefore, the as-prepared pCNT-PCM composite is believed to have similar potential to cCNT and shows prominent performance as a flowable conductive filler for battery thermal management systems.

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