Abstract

AbstractThe electrical conductivity of ternary composites composed of a biopolymer blend with conductive particles (carbon black [CB]) is induced by the control of particle dispersion in the dispersed phase. If the CB particles have higher chemical affinity for the secondary phase (poly(caprolactone) [PCL]]) than the matrix (poly(lactic acid) [PLA]), especially as the concentration of the PCL phase decreases significantly to 4 wt%, the PCL phase induces the aggregation of CB particles beyond the selective localization, resulting in a shift of the particle percolation threshold to a lower concentration of particles (2.44 wt% CB). Moreover, the mixing ratio between the CB and the PCL phase significantly affects the formation of percolation of particles. When the mixing ratio of CB to PCL is equivalent (1:1), the ternary composite shows high electrical DC conductivity above 1 S/m with 10 wt% CB. The addition of a small amount of PCL induces the formation of particle aggregates with a high aspect ratio, providing more electron transfer pathways due to the multiple points of contact between the particle aggregates (power law scaling exponent of the composites ~2.14). Meanwhile, a binary composite (PLA/CB) never reaches high electrical conductivity of 1 S/m and even requires a greater concentration of CB (13 wt% CB for 10−3 S/m) to accomplish electron transfer because of the small aspect ratio of randomly dispersed particle aggregates (power law scaling exponent ~3.20).

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