Thermally conductive yet electrically insulating polymer composites are urgently required for thermal management applications of modern electrical systems and electronic devices because of their multifunctionality and ease of processing. However, the thermal conductivity enhancement of polymer composites is usually at the price of the loss of lightweight, the deterioration of flexibility, and electrical insulation. Here we report advanced polymer nanocomposites containing orientated boron nitride nanosheets (BNNSs), which simultaneously exhibit high thermal conductivity enhancement, excellent electrical insulation, and outstanding flexibility. These nanocomposite films can be easily constructed by electrospinning polymer/BNNSs nanocomposite fibers, vertically folding the electrospun nanocomposite fibers and the subsequent pressing. The nanocomposite films exhibit thickness-dependent in-plane thermal conductivity, which can reach 16.3 W/(m•K) in the 18 μm thick nanocomposite film with 33 wt % BNNSs. In addition, the nanocomposite films have superior electrically insulating properties compared with the pristine polymer, such as reduced dielectric loss, increased electrical resistivity, and enhanced breakdown strength. The strong thermal management capability of the nanocomposite film was demonstrated in switching power supply, which showed the importance of high in-plane thermal conductivity in thermal management of high-power density electronic devices.
Semiconducting inorganic nanowires (NWs), nanotubes and nanofibers have been extensively explored in recent years as potential building blocks for nanoscale electronics, optoelectronics, chemical/biological/ optical sensing, and energy harvesting, storage and conversion, etc. Besides the top-down approaches such as conventional lithography technologies, nanowires are commonly grown by the bottom-up approaches such as solution growth, template-guided synthesis, and vapor-liquid-solid process at a relatively low cost. Superior performance has been demonstrated using nanowires devices. However, most of the nanowire devices are limited to the demonstration of single devices, an initial step toward nanoelectronic circuits, not adequate for production on a large scale at low cost. Controlled and uniform assembly of nanowires with high scalability is still one of the major bottleneck challenges towards the materials and device integration for electronics. In this review, we aim to present recent progress toward nanowire device assembly technologies, including flow-assisted alignment, Langmuir-Blodgett assembly, bubble-blown technique, electric/magnetic-field-directed assembly, contact/roll printing, planar growth, bridging method, and electrospinning, etc. And their applications in high-performance, flexible electronics, sensors, photovoltaics, bioelectronic interfaces and nano-resonators are also presented.
Resistance change under mechanical stimuli arouses mass operational heat, damaging the performance, lifetime, and reliability of stretchable electronic devices, therefore rapid thermal heat dissipating is necessary. Here we report a stretchable strain sensor with outstanding thermal management. Besides a high stretchability and sensitivity testified by human motion monitoring, as well as long-term durability, an enhanced thermal conductivity from the casted thermoplastic polyurethane-boron nitride nanosheets layer helps rapid heat transmission to the environments, while the porous electrospun fibrous thermoplastic polyurethane membrane leads to thermal insulation. A 32% drop of the real time saturated temperature is achieved. For the first time we in-situ investigated the dynamic operational temperature fluctuation of stretchable electronics under repeating stretching-releasing processes. Finally, cytotoxicity test confirms that the nanofillers are tightly restricted in the nanocomposites, making it harmless to human health. All the results prove it an excellent candidate for the next-generation of wearable devices.
The continuous evolution toward semiconductor technology in the "more-than-Moore" era and rapidly increasing power density of modern electronic devices call for advanced thermal interface materials (TIMs). Here, we report a novel strategy to construct flexible polymer nanocomposite TIMs for advanced thermal management applications. First, aligned polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) supported and interconnected 2D boron nitride nanosheets (BNNSs) composite fiber membranes were fabricated by electrospinning. Then, the nanocomposite TIMs were constructed by rolling the PVA/BNNS composite fiber membranes to form cylinders and subsequently vacuum-assisted impregnation of polydimethylsiloxane (PDMS) into the porous cylinders. The nanocomposite TIMs not only exhibit a superhigh through-plane thermal conductivity enhancement of about 10 times at a low BNNS loading of 15.6 vol % in comparison with the pristine PDMS but also show excellent electrical insulating property (i.e., high volume electrical resistivity). The outstanding thermal management capability of the nanocomposite TIMs was practically confirmed by capturing the surface temperature variations of a working LED chip integrated with the nanocomposite TIMs.
As the demand for renewable energy resource is growing rapidly worldwide, a variety of energy materials and technologies are being developed. In this review, we aim to summarize recent developments in the state-of-the-art research on energy harvesting technologies such as thin-film Si or Ge, CdTe, GaAs, organic, hybrid, and dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) utilizing one-dimensional (1D) nanomaterials, mainly semiconductor nanowires, nanocones, nanotubes and nanofibers, which are prepared by vapor-liquid-solid method, colloidal lithography, template-guided growth, or electrospinning. Moreover, the future challenges (such as efficiency improvement and natural resource limitations) and prospects of nanostructured solar cells are proposed.
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