2006 AIChE Annual Meeting

Thermal Conductivity of Carbon Fiber/Liquid Crystal Polymer Composites

Authors

Tomson, A. M. - Presenter, Michigan Technological University
Bayles, T., Mississippi State University
King, J. A., Michigan Technological University
Miller, M. G., Michigan Technological University
Fuel cells require thermally conductive bipolar plates. These are typically composed of a thermoplastic resin filled with a single type of graphite added for conductivity. In this study varying amounts of two types of carbon fibers, Fortafil 243 and Panex 30, were added in volume percentages ranging from 0 to 55% to a thermoplastic matrix, Vectra A950RX Liquid Crystal Polymer. The resulting single filler composite materials were tested for through-plane thermal conductivity with the ASTM F433 guarded heat flow meter method. Furthermore, the in-plane and through-plane thermal conductivity was tested using the transient plane source method.

The two types of composite materials produced similar through-plane thermal conductivities until about 40 vol% fiber. After that, the Panex/Vectra composites had higher through-plane thermal conductivity. Panex/Vectra composites also had higher in-plane thermal conductivity at all filler levels. Due to these results, Panex/Vectra composites have a consistently higher in-plane to through-plane conductivity ratio.

A model was created from these results showing an exponential relationship between the volume fraction of filler and square root of the product of the in-plane and through-plane thermal conductivity. Since through-plane thermal conductivity models currently exist, they can be used with this model to predict in-plane thermal conductivity.