Some don’t like it hot: Thermal conductivity-switching bottleneck resolved

Daily News Egypt
3 Min Read

 Mobile phones from a few decades ago look like antiquated plastic toys today. That’s an example of the dramatic miniaturisation of modern electronics, as well as added functionality. Unfortunately, this miniaturisation comes with a problem — the challenge of dissipating heat. 

This challenge limits the functionality of ultra-small electronic devices. For practical applications, the solution to heat dissipation must incorporate a means of modulating the temperature at which the device changes its speed of heat transmission.

Now, in a study recently published in Nano Letters scientific journal, researchers from Osaka University and collaborating partners have experimentally modulated the thermal switching temperature of block copolymers. 

This study will help researchers cheaply modulate the temperature of organic electronic devices by changing the speed of the heat transmission, and thus help solve an important challenge of device miniaturisation.

“Liquid-crystalline, nanostructured block copolymers are ideal for our work,” explains first author Takafumi Ishibe.

“By using changes in temperature to modulate the anisotropy of the nanostructures, one can easily modulate the thermal conductivity of the polymer.”

One component — known as the mesogen — of the polymer undergoes a phase transition (from cylindrical to spherical nano-structuring) upon crossing a temperature threshold. This temperature is known as the transition temperature. In other words, the anisotropy — and thus the thermal conductivity — of the polymer depends on the temperature.

The key to the researchers’ work is that tuning the chemical composition of the mesogen is an easy means of changing the transition temperature. That is — by straightforward chemical synthesis — one can easily adjust the temperature at which the anisotropy changes occur, and thus change the speed of heat transmission from the polymer.

“We adjusted the transition temperature over the range of 90°C to 147°C by judicious choice of the mesogen,” says senior author Yoshiaki Nakamura.

“Conductivity-switching was fully reversible, and the difference between the on and off state was approximately two, which is comparable to the conventional values of various thermal switch reported in the preceding studies.”

Many researchers have changed the on/off ratio of thermal conductivity-switching materials. However, this study is the first to experimentally focus on modulating the thermal switching temperature by controlling the transition temperature of such materials. 

By doing so, this team has imparted practical functionality to block copolymers that undergo thermal conductivity-switching, and at low cost. This innovation holds great promise for the sustainability of thermal management in upcoming advanced technologies.

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