Author(s):
Pyrlin, Sergey V.
; Ramos, Marta M. D.
Date: 2013
Persistent ID: http://hdl.handle.net/1822/26871
Origin: RepositóriUM - Universidade do Minho
Description
Apresentação efetuada no European Congress and Exhibition on Advanced Materials and Processes - EuroMat 2013, em Sevilha, Espanha, 2013 Development of functional composite materials by addition of inorganic inclusions to polymer
matrix attracts growing attention in last decades. However such material characteristics depend
not only on the concentration and properties of nanoinclusions but also on their distribution
inside embedding polymer, which complicates prediction and optimization of composite
properties. Carbon nanotubes (CNT) attract particular interest as reinforcement material due to
their unique properties tunable by doping and functionalization.
Different properties of carbon nanotubes were successfully studied in silico in numerous papers
by atomistic calculations. However computational chemistry is limited to systems containing
hundreds to several thousands of atoms so only fragments of polymer chains and nanotubes are
accessible. Meanwhile optical microscopy analysis shows that industrial-scale CNT-polymer
composites contain distribution irregularities and agglomerates of CNTs up to ~10 micron size
[1].
Charge transport in such composites mostly explained by electron tunneling between conductive
inclusions, probability of which depends on nanotube's electronic structure as well as on
tunneling distance and local electric field in the contact region, affected by the presence of other
conducting inclusions. To facilitate the investigation of CNT-polymer composites' electric
properties a two-level modeling procedure is suggested: first, local density of states (LDOS)
around CNT's Fermi level is evaluated from ab initial calculations including the effect of doping
and functionalization, than a Monte Carlo simulation of charge transport between CNTs is
carried out where the tunneling probability is estimated using previously calculated LDOS and
simplified representation of electronic wave functions in the inter-CNT space as spherical or
cylindrical waves.
The suggested procedure, although very simplistic, allows charge transport studies on a length
scales of ~100 um compared to the scale of CNTs' distribution irregularities in composites and
direct comparison with experimental data.