Precuring Matrix Viscosity Controls Thermal Conductivity of Elastomeric Composites with Compression‐Activated Liquid and Solid Metallic Filler Networks

Abstract

Polymer matrix composites with liquid metal droplet and solid particle fillers are promising candidates for thermal interface materials (TIMs) used in electronics thermal management. To achieve good thermal transport, the particle and droplet fillers must be interconnected to form thermally conductive percolation pathways in the polymer matrix. This in turn requires displacement of the polymer between fillers as well as rupture of the oxide shell on the liquid metal droplets. This study demonstrates a multipronged strategy to achieve extensive filler bridging and a high thermal conductivity polymer TIM pad. The strategy synergistically employs reactive solid and liquid microscale fillers, a polymer matrix with tuned precure viscosity, and mechanical compression during thermal curing of the composite. The data demonstrate that the viscosity of the precursor polymer solution prior to curing plays a major role in the resulting thermal conductivity. More specifically, samples made with low viscosity ≈100 cSt solutions achieve a high thermal conductivity of ≈15 W m−1 K−1 at a curing pressure of 2 MPa. This thermal conductivity is double that achieved with high viscosity ≈2300 cSt solutions. Since many polymer systems employed in industry and research have a high precure viscosity, this insight has important implications for next‐generation TIMs.

Document Details

Document Type
Pub Defense Publication
Publication Date
Feb 23, 2023
Source ID
10.1002/admi.202201875

Entities

People

  • Aastha Uppal
  • Ashish Rana
  • Jae Sang Lee
  • Konrad Rykaczewski
  • Matthew D. Green
  • Robert Y Wang
  • Wilson Kong

Organizations

  • Arizona State University
  • Army Research Office
  • Intel Corporation

Tags

Fields of Study

  • Materials science

Readers

  • Polymer Science and Engineering.
  • Reinforced Composite Materials
  • Thermal Physics or Thermal Science.

Technology Areas

  • Microelectronics