Title: Computational micromechanics modeling of piezoresistivity in carbon nanotube-polymer nanocomposites
Xiang Ren,
Dept. of Aerospace and Ocean Engineering, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, Randolph Hall (0203) Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA
Gary D Seidel,
Dept. of Aerospace and Ocean Engineering, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 228 Randolph Hall (0203) Blacksburg, VA 24061, USA
Composite Interfaces -- 2013 -- Vol. 20, Iss. 9 pp. 693-720
Abstract
The macroscale piezoresistive response, i.e. the change in electrical resistivity under
the application of strain, of carbon nanotube–polymer nanocomposites has been
observed to lead to gauge factors which are much larger than the gauge factors of commonly
used strain gauges. Whereas most strain gauges rely on geometric effects, the
gauge factors of carbon nanotube–polymer nanocomposites are the result of a combination
of nanoscale mechanisms, namely electrical tunneling (electron hopping) and
carbon nanotube inherent piezoresistivity, which can lead to substantial differences
between the nanocomposite resistivity at zero strain and the resistivity under an applied
strain. This paper focuses on modeling the piezoresistive effect of carbon nanotube–
polymer nanocomposites by using computational micromechanics techniques based on
finite element analysis. For nanocomposites with aligned carbon nanotubes, an electromechanically
coupled code is developed for nominal well-dispersed carbon nanotube
representative volume elements (RVEs) and for non well-dispersed cases in the aligned
and transverse directions. The microscale mechanisms that may have a substantial
influence on the overall piezoresistivity of the nanocomposites, i.e. the electrical tunneling
effect, and the coupled effect of the electrical tunneling effect and the inherent
piezoresistivity of the carbon nanotube, are included in microscale RVEs in order to
understand their influence on macroscale piezoresistive response in terms of both the
normalized change in effective resistivity and the corresponding effective gauge factor
under applied strain. It is found that in the transverse directions, the electrical tunneling
effect is the dominant mechanism, and in order for the inherent carbon nanotube piezoresistivity
to have a noticeable coupling effect or influence, the local volume fraction
of the carbon nanotube should be sufficiently high or the height of barrier of the polymer
matrix should be sufficiently low. It is also found that in the axial direction,
although the electrical tunneling effect is still the dominant mechanism, the inherent
piezoresistivity of the carbon nanotube may have a substantial contribution to the overall
axial piezoresistive response.
Key words: piezoresistivity; carbon nanotube (CNT); polymer nanocomposites; computational
micromechanics; electrical tunneling