Abstract

We report a molecular dynamics study of heat conduction in carbon nanotube (CNT)/polyethylene (PE) composites. Particular attention was focused on two key interfacial effects: the thermal boundary resistance across the CNT/PE interface, and the reduction of CNT thermal conductivity due to boundary phonon scattering at the interface with amorphous PE matrix. The calculations reveal a relatively high thermal boundary resistance across the CNT/polyethylene interfaces (∼1×10−7m2KW−1) and a moderate but non-negligible reduction (∼28%) of CNT thermal conductivity. By a mode-dependent phonon transport analysis, the phonon boundary scattering rate was found to increase with decreasing frequency, which suggests a size effect in the thermal conductivity reduction. Finally, the likely impact of the thermal resistances on the effective thermal conductivity of a macroscopic CNT/PE composite is quantified based on an effective medium approximation model.

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