Melt-Mixed 3D Hierarchical Graphene/Polypropylene Nanocomposites with Low Electrical Percolation Threshold
Journal article, 2019

Graphene-based materials are a family of carbonaceous structures that can be produced using a variety of processes either from graphite or other precursors. These materials are typically a few layered sheets of graphene in the form of platelets and maintain some of the properties of pristine graphene (such as two-dimensional platelet shape, aspect ratio, and graphitic bonding). In this work we present melt mixed graphene-based polypropylene systems with significantly reduced percolation threshold. Traditionally melt-mixed systems suffer from poor dispersion that leads to high electrical percolation values. In contrast in our work, graphene was added into an isotactic polypropylene matrix, achieving an electrical percolation threshold of similar to 1 wt.%. This indicates that the filler dispersion process has been highly efficient, something that leads to the suppression of the beta phase that have a strong influence on the crystallization behavior and subsequent thermal and mechanical performance. The electrical percolation values obtained are comparable with reported solution mixed systems, despite the use of simple melt mixing protocols and the lack of any pre or post-treatment of the final compositions. The latter is of particular importance as the preparation method used in this work is industrially relevant and is readily scalable.

electrical conductivity

graphene

polypropylene

electrical percolation

melt mixing

nanocomposites

Author

Thomas Gkourmpis

Borealis GmbH

Karolina Gaska

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Engineering Materials

Davide Tranchida

Borealis GmbH

Antonis Gitsas

Borealis GmbH

Christian Müller

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Aleksandar Matic

Chalmers, Physics, Materials Physics

Roland Kádár

Chalmers, Industrial and Materials Science, Engineering Materials

Nanomaterials

20794991 (eISSN)

Vol. 9 12 1766

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Production

Energy

Materials Science

Subject Categories

Polymer Technologies

Materials Chemistry

Other Physics Topics

Other Materials Engineering

DOI

10.3390/nano9121766

PubMed

31835842

More information

Latest update

1/3/2024 9