Abstract

The effective thermophysical and optical properties of high density polyethylene (HDPE) filled with 50 μm and 5 μm particle sizes of expanded graphite (EG50, EG5) are characterized. The methods used were front- and back-detection modulated photothermal radiometry (FD-, BD-PTR) and BD-flash IR thermography. Results were interpreted according to one-dimensional heat diffusion models. The absolute thermal diffusivity was determined at low frequency from FD- and BD-PTR spectra, while the volumetric heat capacity, the thermal effusivity, and the optical absorption coefficient were determined from broad-band FD-PTR spectra. The directly obtained diffusivity values compare well with those calculated from the heat capacity and thermal effusivity, and with BD-flash results. The errors caused by the finite absorption coefficient of diluted samples are also evaluated and corrected for. A particle-size effect with the opposite influence on thermal and optical properties has been observed. Heat transport parameters of HDPE/EG composites are significantly enhanced (factor of 3 to 4 in thermal diffusivity) at low particle charge before reaching saturation above a 0.10 particle volume fraction. These features are explained in the framework of effective medium models by strongly non-spherical EG particles.

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