Abstract

Numerous studies have been reported on thermal interface materials based on synergistic hybrid effects, however, most of them contain only fragmentary experimental results and the related model has been rarely proposed to explain the effects exactly. Herein, the thermal conductivities of the composites were systematically evaluated according to various filler contents and ratios. It was found that the fraction of the secondary filler inducing the maximum synergistic effect decreased as the total filler content increased. In addition, when the fraction was higher than the optimum fraction, the anti-synergistic effect occurred. At the optimum fraction, effective phonon transfer was induced due to the improved filler network formation of graphene nanoplatelet (GNP)-carbon nanotube (CNT), thereby achieving high thermal conductivity of 7.69 W/m·K at fGNP = 27.69 vol% and fCNT = 0.57 vol%. Moreover, the Kim-Jang-Lee (KJL) model for the synergistic effect was proposed by introducing filler-ratio variables into the critical percolation equation reported previously, and the KJL model for the anti-synergistic effect was proposed based on the rule of mixture of composites filled with the optimal connected filler network and filled with the excessive secondary filler.

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