Enhancing the thermal performance of polyethylene glycol phase change material with carbon-based fillers

Tan Lo Wong, Ke Ma, Chamil Abeykoon

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Abstract

New implementation of phase change materials (PCMs), such as Polyethylene Glycols (PEGs), can alleviate the overconsumption of natural resources and can also be applied in solar-thermal energy conversion applications due to their distinctive semi-crystalline structure. To further enhance the thermal properties of PCMs, carbon-based nanomaterials such as graphene nanoplatelets (GNPs) and milled carbon fibre (MCF) can be incorporated to fabricate PEG-based composites due to their high thermal conductivity. One of the possible drawbacks of the addition of carbon-based fillers is their aggregation at high loadings, leading to a possible reduction in the latent heat of PCM composites. Hence, this study explored the most appropriate loading level (5 wt.%) of carbon-based fillers with pristine PEGs to achieve optimal thermal performance. Specifically, PEG-based composites were synthesised with three fillers (GNPs, graphite and MCF) via a temperature-assisted ultrasonication method and rapid solidification. Then, Raman Spectroscopy was used to quantify the dispersion of fillers among the PEG matrices. The results showed that despite a 32.6 % reduction in enthalpy of fusion to 155.5 J g–1, the addition of 15 wt.% of MCF increased the thermal conductivity up to 0.67 W m–1 K–1, which was approximately 2.5 times higher than that of pristine PEG. Moreover, explanations were provided on the possible heat transfer mechanisms in different types of carbon-based fillers. PEG/MCF PCMs displayed good properties on latent heat, thermal conductivity, aggregation prohibition, volumetric heat capacity, phase change temperature and thermal stability, while PEG/graphite composites exhibited excellent performance on thermal diffusivity, phase change (melting) temperature, specific heat capacity and cyclability.
Original languageEnglish
Article number124919
JournalInternational Journal of Heat and Mass Transfer
Volume220
Early online date15 Nov 2023
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Mar 2024

Keywords

  • Phase change material
  • Polyethylene glycol composites
  • Graphene nanoplatelets
  • thermal transfer mechanisms
  • solar-to-thermal conversion
  • Energy storage applications

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