Shoji Nagaoka*acd, 
Takuma Jodaibd, 
Yoshihiro Kameyamac, 
Maki Horikawaacd, 
Tomohiro Shirosakiad, 
Naoya Ryuad, 
Makoto Takafujicd, 
Hideo Sakuraicd and 
Hirotaka Iharacd
aKumamoto Industrial Research Institute, 3-11-38 Higashi-machi, Higashi-ku, Kumamoto 862-0901, Japan. E-mail: nagaoka@kmt-iri.go.jp
bOgic Technologies Co. Ltd., 2-9-9 Kami Kumamoto, Nishi-ku, Kumamoto 860-8555, Japan. E-mail: Jodai@ogic.ne.jp
cDepartment of Applied Chemistry and Biochemistry, Kumamoto University, 2-39-1 Kurokami, Chuo-ku, Kumamoto 860-8555, Japan. E-mail: wildcats@chem.kumamoto-u.ac.jp
dKumamoto Institute for Photo-Electro Organics (PHOENICS), 3-11-38, Higashi-machi, Higashi-ku, Kumamoto 862-0901, Japan
First published on 29th March 2016
We fabricated sheets with high thermal conductivity in a way that required less filler. Our approach is as follows: (1) we used core–shell spherical microbeads as the thermally conductive filler; (2) we developed cellulose/h-boron nitride (BN) core–shell spherical microbeads using phase separation of a cellulose xanthate aqueous solution (viscose); (3) we hybridized the cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads with epoxy resin using compression molding. This process reduced the amount of h-BN required because the microbeads efficiently formed thermally conductive pathways among the shells in the insulating resin. The thermal conductivities of the resulting sheet in the thickness and in-plane directions were 10.6 and 15.6 W m−1 K−1, respectively, using only 48.5 vol% h-BN. In contrast, the thermal conductivities of the composite sheet with 75 vol% of naked h-BN particles were 6.31 and 22.9 W m−1 K−1 in the thickness and in-plane directions, respectively. This large difference resulted from the anisotropic structure of h-BN. The changes in thermal conductivity with h-BN content were inconsistent with percolation theory, when using the cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads as a filler. The thermally conductive sheets fabricated with microbeads exhibited thermal conductivities several times greater than that of sheets fabricated with naked h-BN. This indicated that thermally conductive pathways had formed in the insulating resin.
Boron nitride (BN) is a common thermally conductive material. It can adopt various structures such as hexagonal (h-BN), cubic (c-BN), rhombohedral (r-BN), and turbostratic (t-BN).19 For h-BN, while its thermal conductivity along its c-axis (thickness) is only 1–2 W m−1 K−1, along its a- and b-axises (in-plane) its thermal conductivity is more than 600 W m−1 K−1.20 In the current study, we investigated the use of h-BN as a thermally conductive material. We (1) used core–shell spherical microbeads as a thermally conductive filler; (2) developed these cellulose/h-BN core–shell spherical microbeads using phase separation of a cellulose xanthate aqueous solution (viscose). Cellulose is reportedly hybridized with inorganic materials such as TiO2,21,22 diamond, SiC, Al2O3, CeO2 (ref. 23) and various pigments;24 (3) hybridized the cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads with epoxy resin, using compression molding. This process reduced the required amount of h-BN. This is because the microbeads efficiently formed thermally conductive pathways among the shells in the insulating resin. This is shown in Fig. 1.
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| Fig. 1 Formation of thermal conductive network in resin sheet hybridized cellulose/BN core–shell microbeads. | ||
![[thin space (1/6-em)]](https://www.rsc.org/images/entities/char_2009.gif) 000, Nippon Shokubai Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan). Two types of h-BN powder (BN-S and BN-L) were obtained from Denki Kagaku Kougyo Kabushiki Kaisha, Japan. Table 1 summarizes the characteristics of the h-BN powders and cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads. First, BN particles (BN-S and BN-L) were dispersed in an aqueous solution of sodium polyacrylate. Next, an aqueous solution of cellulose xanthate was added to the aqueous dispersion of BN particles and sodium polyacrylate. While stirring at 120 rpm, the suspension of BN and cellulose xanthate was heated to 80 °C over 1 h, then kept at 80 °C for 30 min. The obtained product was collected in filter cloth and washed with H2O. To remove sulfur from the microbeads, they were immersed in a stirred aqueous solution of 10 wt% HCl. The obtained microbeads were then washed with H2O and freeze dried.
000, Nippon Shokubai Co., Ltd., Osaka, Japan). Two types of h-BN powder (BN-S and BN-L) were obtained from Denki Kagaku Kougyo Kabushiki Kaisha, Japan. Table 1 summarizes the characteristics of the h-BN powders and cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads. First, BN particles (BN-S and BN-L) were dispersed in an aqueous solution of sodium polyacrylate. Next, an aqueous solution of cellulose xanthate was added to the aqueous dispersion of BN particles and sodium polyacrylate. While stirring at 120 rpm, the suspension of BN and cellulose xanthate was heated to 80 °C over 1 h, then kept at 80 °C for 30 min. The obtained product was collected in filter cloth and washed with H2O. To remove sulfur from the microbeads, they were immersed in a stirred aqueous solution of 10 wt% HCl. The obtained microbeads were then washed with H2O and freeze dried.
| Sheet No. | Filler | Content of BN (wt%) | Content of BN (vol%) | Thermal conductivity (W m−1 K−1) | In-plane direction/thickness direction | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Filler type | Thickness direction | In-plane direction | ||||
| a BN content: 27.5 wt%.b BN content: 44.9 wt%.c BN content: 67.7 wt%. Measure temperature: 25 °C. | ||||||
| Sheet-1 | BN-S | 39.9 | 27 | 1.20 | 2.0 | 1.66 | 
| Sheet-2 | 63.3 | 49.0 | 2.74 | 4.43 | 1.62 | |
| Sheet-3 | 80.2 | 69.3 | 4.30 | 10.1 | 2.35 | |
| Sheet-4 | BN-L | 19.6 | 12.0 | 0.70 | 0.60 | 0.85 | 
| Sheet-5 | 57.1 | 42.6 | 2.40 | 4.50 | 1.88 | |
| Sheet-6 | 84.4 | 75.0 | 6.31 | 22.9 | 3.62 | |
| Sheet-7 | BN-S/Cell-1a | 22.4 | 15.5 | 1.93 | 2.29 | 1.62 | 
| Sheet-8 | 24.9 | 17.7 | 2.40 | 2.95 | 1.23 | |
| Sheet-9 | 26.6 | 19.3 | 3.22 | 5.22 | 1.62 | |
| Sheet-10 | BN-S/Cell-2b | 31.6 | 22.1 | 1.78 | 2.27 | 1.28 | 
| Sheet-11 | 39.3 | 29.3 | 4.17 | 5.30 | 1.27 | |
| Sheet-12 | 42.5 | 32.5 | 4.65 | 7.77 | 1.67 | |
| Sheet-13 | BN-L/Cell-3c | 28.5 | 18.7 | 1.07 | 0.99 | 0.93 | 
| Sheet-14 | 55.8 | 43.8 | 6.14 | 10.1 | 1.64 | |
| Sheet-15 | 59.9 | 48.5 | 10.6 | 15.6 | 1.47 | |
Thus, we investigated the conditions for preparing microbeads with cellulose cores and h-BN particle shells. We examined two phase separation methods, one in which BN was dispersed in a cellulose xanthate aqueous solution (procedure-1), and another in which BN was dispersed in a SPA aqueous solution (procedure-2). These two procedures are described in the ESI, and are shown in Fig. S1.† In procedure-1, the cellulose xanthate aqueous solution, containing BN particles was added to the SPA aqueous solution, as reported previously.21–24 In procedure-2, the cellulose xanthate aqueous solution was added to the BN-S particle-SPA aqueous dispersion. Table S1† summarizes the loading ratios and contents of h-BN and cellulose. The detailed preparation conditions of the spherical microbeads are described in the ESI.† Fig. 2a and b shows SEM images of the cellulose/h-BN composite spherical microbeads obtained by procedure-1 and procedure-2, respectively. As expected for procedure-1, BN-S particles were involved in the cellulose sphere, similar to previous results concerning TiO2 and Al2O3.22,23 We attribute this result to the fact that solidification of the cellulose xanthate domain occurred with elimination of CSS−, unless the BN-S particles fully diffused to the interface between the cellulose and polyacrylic anion domains.
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| Fig. 2 SEM images of cellulose/BN-S spherical microbeads prepared by procedure-1 (a) and -2 (b). (a) BN-S/Cell-0 (BN content: 41.6 wt%). (b) BN-S/Cell-1 (BN content: 44.9 wt%). | ||
For procedure-2, the resulting microbeads were spherical and their surfaces were covered with h-BN particles, as shown in the SEM images of BN-S/Cell-1 in Fig. 2b. This indicates that BN-S was located on the surfaces of the cellulose spheres. They diffused to the area around the cellulose domain from the polyacrylic anion domain during sphering because of their electrostatic repulsion by polyacrylic anions. We prepared microbeads with cellulose cores and h-BN particle shells by phase separation of cellulose xanthate with BN dispersed in SPA aqueous media. This is shown in Fig. 3a–c for BN-S/Cell-1, BN-S/Cell-2, and BN-L/Cell-3, respectively. Table 1 summarizes the characteristics of the h-BN powder and cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads.
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| Fig. 3 SEM images of three types of cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads. (a) BN-S/Cell-1 (BN content: 27.5 wt%), (b) BN-S/Cell-2 (BN content: 44.9 wt%), (c) BN-L/Cell-3 (BN content: 67.7 wt%). | ||
Fig. 5a and b shows the thermal conductivity as a function of h-BN content in h-BN/epoxy resin composite sheets filled with cellulose/h-BN (BN-S) core–shell microbeads and naked h-BN (BN-S), respectively. For the naked h-BN filler, the thermal conductivity of the composite sheet did not increase, unless the h-BN content was greater than the percolation threshold of 30 vol%. This was consistent with percolation theory.14–16 The composite sheet filled with cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads, including BN/Cell-1 and BN/Cell-2, showed much sharper increases in thermal conductivity in both the thickness and in-plane directions, with increasing h-BN content. The thermal conductivities of the composite sheets were estimated from the thermal conductivity curves in Fig. 5a and b. Those of the composite sheets filled with microbeads were much greater than that of the composite sheet filled with naked h-BN. Table 2 summarizes the thermal conductivities of the h-BN/epoxy resin composite sheets. The composite sheet containing 27.0 vol% naked h-BN sheet (sheet-1) exhibited a thermal conductivity in the thickness direction of only 1.2 W m−1 K−1. In contrast, the sheet filled containing 29.3 vol% cellulose/h-BN core–shell microbeads (sheet-11) exhibited a thermal conductivity in the thickness direction of 4.17 W m−1 K−1. This was approximately four times greater than that of the sheet filled with naked h-BN. The thermal conductivity of sheet-11 was comparable to that of the composite sheet filled with 69.3 vol% naked h-BN (sheet-3): 4.30 W m−1 K−1. The thermal conductivity of sheet-11 along the in-plane direction was 5.30 W m−1 K−1. We investigated the effect of the core–shell structure by comparing the thermal conductivities of sheet-9 (BN/Cell-1 filler) and sheet-10 (BN/Cell-2 filler). Although BN/Cell-1 had a much lower BN content than BN/Cell-2, sheet-9 had a much higher thermal conductivity than sheet-10. This indicates that the volume content of the BN/Cell-2 core–shell microbeads in sheet-10 (62.9 vol%) was sufficiently small that it could not form a complete, continuous thermally conductive pathway (95.8 vol% of the sheet volume). In contrast, the filler in BN/Cell-2 could form a complete, continuous thermal conductive pathway. This was because the occupied volume of the BN/Cell-1 core–shell microbeads in sheet-9 (95.8 vol%) was sufficient. Fig. 6 shows EDX maps of nitrogen and carbon atoms in the cross-sections of sheet-9 and sheet-10. Sheet-9 exhibited a more continuous thermal conductive pathway. BN-S/Cell-1 and BN-S/Cell-2 were incorporated into sheet-9 and sheet-10, respectively. As summarized in Table 2, the BN content of BN-S/Cell-2 was more than that of BN-S/Cell-1. The EDX cross-sections showed more N atoms in sheet-10 than in sheet-9. This was because the particle size of BN-S/Cell-2 was larger (mean particle diameter: 34 μm), and the shell of BN-S/Cell-2 was twice as thick as that of BN-S/Cell-1.
Increasing the particle size of BN in a composite sheet also increases the sheet's thermal conductivity.25 We attempted using fillers containing larger BN particles to fabricate sheets with higher thermal conductivity, sheet-13, sheet-14, and sheet-15 contained the filler of BN-L/Cell-3 (BN size: 18 μm). Core–shell microbeads (BL-L/Cell-3) using BN-L were prepared, as shown in Fig. 3. The surface of BL-L/Cell-3 was covered with h-BN particles, similar to the surface of BN-S/Cell-2. As shown in Fig. 7, the thermal conductivities of the composite sheet with naked BN-L particles (sheet-6) in the thickness and in-plane directions were 6.31 and 22.9 W m−1 K−1, respectively. In contrast, the thermal conductivities of the composite sheet with BL-L/Cell-3 in the thickness and in-plane directions were 10.6 and 15.6 W m−1 K−1, respectively. Sheet-15 had a higher thermal conductivity in the thickness direction (10.6 W m−1 K−1) than sheet-6 (6.31 W m−1 K−1), despite the h-BN content of sheet-15 being only 48.5 vol%. Sheet-15 had the highest thermal conductivity in the thickness direction among all the sheets. The large difference in thermal conductivity between the thickness and in-plane directions arises from the anisotropic structure of h-BN. As shown by the results of naked BN-S and BN-L in Table 2, the difference between the conductivity in the thickness and in-plane directions increased with increasing h-BN content and thermal conductivity. The conductivities along the in-plane direction of sheets filled with core–shell microbeads became smaller than those of sheets filled with naked h-BN, as evidenced by comparing sheets with comparable thermal conductivities in the thickness direction: sheet-8 versus sheet-2, sheet-12 versus sheet-3, sheet-14 versus sheet-6. This behavior indicates that the anisotropy of crystalline h-BN in the insulating resin was suppressed in the composite sheet. This was because the h-BN particles were distributed around the cellulose spheres. Furthermore, the changes in thermal conductivity with h-BN content for the microbead-filled sheets were inconsistent percolation theory. The sheets filled with core–shell microbeads were several times more thermally conductive than the sheets filled with naked h-BN.
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| Fig. 7  Thermal conductivity against BN content in sheet. (a) Thickness direction, (b) in-plane direction. (  ): Sheet fabricated using BN-L/Cell-3. (  ): Sheet fabricated using naked BN-L. | ||
Table S2† summarizes the physical properties of all the composite sheets, including their gravities. The gravity of the composite sheet increased with increasing BN content (gravity: 2.26 g cm−3), thus the composite sheets became heavier. For example, the thermal conductivities of sheet-6 and sheet-14 in the thickness direction were comparable, but their gravities were 1.97 and 1.74, respectively. A thermal conductive sheet of lower gravity is one advantage of using core–shell microbeads as the filler.
| Footnote | 
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: 10.1039/c6ra02950g | 
| This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2016 |