Highly Thermally Conductive and Structurally Ultra-Stable Graphitic Films with Seamless Heterointerfaces for Extreme Thermal Management

Highlights Presenting the first investigation into the structurally bubbling-failure mechanism of graphitic film during cyclic liquid nitrogen shocks. Proposing an innovative design about seamless heterointerface constructing a Cu-modified structure. Inventing a new ultra-stable species of highly th...

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Veröffentlicht in:Nano-Micro Letters 2024-12, Vol.16 (1), p.58-397, Article 58
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Peijuan, Hao, Yuanyuan, Shi, Hang, Lu, Jiahao, Liu, Yingjun, Ming, Xin, Wang, Ya, Fang, Wenzhang, Xia, Yuxing, Chen, Yance, Li, Peng, Wang, Ziqiu, Su, Qingyun, Lv, Weidong, Zhou, Ji, Zhang, Ying, Lai, Haiwen, Gao, Weiwei, Xu, Zhen, Gao, Chao
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Highlights Presenting the first investigation into the structurally bubbling-failure mechanism of graphitic film during cyclic liquid nitrogen shocks. Proposing an innovative design about seamless heterointerface constructing a Cu-modified structure. Inventing a new ultra-stable species of highly thermally conductive films to inspire new techniques for efficient and extreme thermal management. Highly thermally conductive graphitic film (GF) materials have become a competitive solution for the thermal management of high-power electronic devices. However, their catastrophic structural failure under extreme alternating thermal/cold shock poses a significant challenge to reliability and safety. Here, we present the first investigation into the structural failure mechanism of GF during cyclic liquid nitrogen shocks (LNS), which reveals a bubbling process characterized by “permeation-diffusion-deformation” phenomenon. To overcome this long-standing structural weakness, a novel metal-nanoarmor strategy is proposed to construct a Cu-modified graphitic film (GF@Cu) with seamless heterointerface. This well-designed interface ensures superior structural stability for GF@Cu after hundreds of LNS cycles from 77 to 300 K. Moreover, GF@Cu maintains high thermal conductivity up to 1088 W m −1  K −1 with degradation of less than 5% even after 150 LNS cycles, superior to that of pure GF (50% degradation). Our work not only offers an opportunity to improve the robustness of graphitic films by the rational structural design but also facilitates the applications of thermally conductive carbon-based materials for future extreme thermal management in complex aerospace electronics.
ISSN:2311-6706
2150-5551
2150-5551
DOI:10.1007/s40820-023-01277-1