1 research outputs found
Polymer-Grafted Nanoparticles with Variable Grafting Densities for High Energy Density Polymeric Nanocomposite Dielectric Capacitors
Designing high energy density dielectric capacitors for
advanced
energy storage systems needs nanocomposite-based dielectric materials,
which can utilize the properties of both inorganic and polymeric materials.
Polymer-grafted nanoparticle (PGNP)-based nanocomposites alleviate
the problems of poor nanocomposite properties by providing synergistic
control over nanoparticle and polymer properties. Here, we synthesize
“core–shell” barium titanate–poly(methyl
methacrylate) (BaTiO3–PMMA) grafted PGNPs using
surface-initiated atom transfer polymerization (SI-ATRP) with variable
grafting densities of (0.303 to 0.929) chains/nm2 and high
molecular masses (97700 g/mL to 130000 g/mol) and observe that low
grafted density and high molecular mass based PGNP show high permittivity,
high dielectric strength, and hence higher energy densities (≈
5.2 J/cm3) as compared to the higher grafted density PGNPs,
presumably due to their “star-polymer”-like conformations
with higher chain-end densities that are known to enhance breakdown.
Nonetheless, these energy densities are an order of magnitude higher
than their nanocomposite blend counterparts. We expect that these
PGNPs can be readily used as commercial dielectric capacitors, and
these findings can serve as guiding principles for developing tunable
high energy density energy storage devices using PGNP systems