High Electric Energy Storage in a Three-Phase Polymer Nanocomposite
POSTER
Abstract
Two-phase polymer/ferroelectric ceramic composites have attracted great interests for electric applications, such as transducers, piezo-sensors, and hydrophone materials, because they combine good processability of polymers and high dielectric constant of ferroelectric ceramics together. The polymer-ceramic composites generally show a high effective dielectric constant only at a high ceramic volume fraction ($>$35 vol.{\%}). Here, a high dielectric constant tetrameric Cu-phthalocyanine (Cu-TMPc) was used as an interfacial phase between the ceramic particles (50-nm BaTiO3) and the polymer matrix [poly(vinylidene fluoride-co-hexafluoropropylene), or P(VDF-HFP)]. To avoid the agglomeration of nanoparticles in P(VDF-HFP), poly(methyl methacrylate) is grafted from Cu-TMPc-coated BaTiO3 nanoparticles using surface-initiated radical polymerization. High electric energy storage and low conductivity were achieved at low filling ratios ($<$15 vol.{\%}).
*This work is supported by Air Force Office of Sponsored Research through Agiltron, Inc.(FA9550-06-C-0074 and FA9550-07-C-0083).