High-contrast and reversible polymer thermal regulator by structural phase transition

In comparison with the advancement of switchable, nonlinear, and active components in electronics, solid-state thermal components for actively controlling heat flow have been extremely rare. We demonstrate a high-contrast and reversible polymer thermal regulator based on the structural phase transit...

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Published inScience advances Vol. 5; no. 12; p. eaax3777
Main Authors Shrestha, Ramesh, Luan, Yuxuan, Shin, Sunmi, Zhang, Teng, Luo, Xiao, Lundh, James S, Gong, Wei, Bockstaller, Michael R, Choi, Sukwon, Luo, Tengfei, Chen, Renkun, Hippalgaonkar, Kedar, Shen, Sheng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States American Association for the Advancement of Science 01.12.2019
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Summary:In comparison with the advancement of switchable, nonlinear, and active components in electronics, solid-state thermal components for actively controlling heat flow have been extremely rare. We demonstrate a high-contrast and reversible polymer thermal regulator based on the structural phase transition in crystalline polyethylene nanofibers. This structural phase transition represents a dramatic change in morphology from a highly ordered all-trans conformation to a combined trans and gauche conformation with rotational disorder, leading to an abrupt change in phonon transport along the molecular chains. For five nanofiber samples measured here, we observe an average thermal switching ratio of ~8× and maximum switching ratio of ~10×, which occurs in a narrow temperature range of 10 K across the structural phase transition. To the best of our knowledge, the ~10× switching ratio exceeds any reported experimental values for solid-solid and solid-liquid phase transitions of materials. There is no thermal hysteresis observed upon heating/cooling cycles.
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These authors contributed equally to this work.
ISSN:2375-2548
2375-2548
DOI:10.1126/sciadv.aax3777