Abstract

Mixtures of paraffin and carbon nanofillers have promising potential for thermal storage, as paraffin (the matrix) possesses high latent heat and the nanofillers compensate for the low thermal conductivity (TC) of paraffin. Understanding thermal transport in these materials is essential for practical applications, as weak thermal transport hinders fast charge/discharge of thermal energy. Here, we use non-equilibrium molecular dynamics (NEMD) simulations to study the interfacial thermal conductance (ITC) between graphene sheets and octadecane (C18H38) matrix under the limiting conditions of the sheets being parallel or perpendicular to the direction of the imposed heat flux. The results show that the systems containing thin graphene layers exhibit higher values of ITC. This study captures the asymptotic saturation of thermal conductance for the liquid phase of the perpendicular structure. Besides, given the greater number of structured layers of paraffin upon phase change, the ITC for the solid paraffin-graphene system is higher than the conductance of the liquid paraffin-graphene interface. We use the Pearson correlation coefficients of the vibrational power spectrum (VPS) of interfacing materials to explain the orders of magnitude variations of the observed ITC.

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