MRS Meetings and Events

 

SB04.11.24 2024 MRS Spring Meeting

Thermal Conductivity Switch due to Topochemical Polymerization of Organic Material

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
5:00pm - 7:00pm

Flex Hall C, Level 2, Summit

Presenter

Co-Author(s)

Sara Makarem1,Amalie Attassi2,Shannon Yee2,James Ponder2,Brian Foley3,Patrick Hopkins1

The University of Virginia1,Georgia Institute of Technology2,Laser Thermal3

Abstract

Sara Makarem1,Amalie Attassi2,Shannon Yee2,James Ponder2,Brian Foley3,Patrick Hopkins1

The University of Virginia1,Georgia Institute of Technology2,Laser Thermal3
A material that exhibits significant change in thermal conductivity due to external stimuli can be used as a thermal switch and can allow the active control of heat flow. These materials are of high importance in various thermal management applications such as refrigeration and waste heat recovery. Due to their sensitivity to external stimuli, organic materials are considered as a promising class of materials in this regard. This study shows a potential thermal switching mechanism due to topochemical polymerization of [2,2′-bi-1H-indene]-1,1′-dione-3,3′-diheptylcarboxylate (BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>). The forward polymerization reaction of BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>monomer to polymer, P(BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>), occurs when exposed to light. Since polymerization alters the interchain interactions, breaking and reforming of bonds between repeat units can affect the thermal conductivity, . This study examines how changes in bond order affects the microscopic thermal conductivity. The thermal conductivities of these samples are measured using time domain thermoreflectance (TDTR). TDTR is a transient, non-contact, optical thermometry technique that utilizes a pump-probe experimental configuration. In addition, steady-state thermoreflectance (SSTR) technique was used to compose a map of thermal conductivity as a function of spatial coordinate for individual monomer and polymer crystallites. The complementary characterizations of these samples confirms that the topochemical polymerization of BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>to P(BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>) changes the bond order which affects the planarity of the repeat unit. Thus, the decrease in thermal conductivity due to this topochemical polymerization is likely due to a greater extent of disorder present in P(BIT-Hep<sub>2</sub>). This study finds that the thermal conductivity within the crystallites differs significantly and reports the average values of 0.478±0.065 W/m/K and 0.110 ±0.060 W/m/K for the monomer and polymer, respectively.

Symposium Organizers

Paddy K. L. Chan, University of Hong Kong
Katelyn Goetz, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Ulrike Kraft, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
Simon Rondeau-Gagne, University of Windsor

Symposium Support

Bronze
Journal of Materials Chemistry C
Proto Manufacturing

Session Chairs

Paddy K. L. Chan
Katelyn Goetz
Ulrike Kraft
Simon Rondeau-Gagne

In this Session

SB04.11.01
Low-Temperature Cross-Linkable Hole Transport Materials for High-Performance Solution-Processed Quantum Dot and Organic Light-Emitting Diodes

SB04.11.02
On-Site Amplification of Neural Signals by Organic Field-Effect Transistors

SB04.11.03
Allrounder Strategy of Using a Photocrosslinker for Photopatterning Transparent Silver Nanowire/PEDOT:PSS Electrodes

SB04.11.06
Intrinsically Stretchable Full-Color Light-Emitting Films via Elastomer Blend for Polymer Light-Emitting Diodes

SB04.11.07
Silicone-Induced Microlithography of Small-Molecule Phosphorescent Emitters for High-Resolution Micro-OLEDs

SB04.11.09
Identity of T* Matters! Improved krISC by Modulating Locally Excited Triplet State in TADF Emitters

SB04.11.10
Investigating The Mechanisms of Nucleation and Growth of [1]Benzothieno[3,2-b] Benzothiophene (BTBT) and its Derivatives Using Molecular Dynamics Simulations

SB04.11.11
Enhancing Integrated Circuit Properties through Engineering Backbone Alignment of Conjugated Polymers

SB04.11.12
Skin-Conformable Electrophysiological Sensor Devices with Tailored Negative Poisson’s Ratio

SB04.11.13
The Host-Guest Interaction Effect in all Organic Room Temperature Phosphorescence Light-Emitting Electrochemical Cells

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