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Electrical Properties of Graphite Nanoparticles in Silicone

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Electrical Properties of Graphite Nanoparticles in Silicone Synopsis

This thesis examines a novel class of flexible electronic material with great potential for use in the construction of stretchable amplifiers and memory elements.  Most remarkably the composite material produces spontaneous oscillations that increase in frequency when pressure is applied to it. In this way, the material mimics the excitatory response of pressure-sensing neurons in the human skin. The composites, formed of silicone and graphitic nanoparticles, were prepared in several allotropic forms and functionalized with naphthalene diimide molecules. A systematic study is presented of the negative differential resistance (NDR) region of the current-voltage curves, which is responsible for the material's active properties. This study was conducted as a function of temperature, graphite filling fraction, scaling to reveal the break-up of the samples into electric field domains at the onset of the NDR region, and an electric-field induced metal-insulator transition in graphite nanoparticles. The effect of molecular functionalization on the miscibility threshold and the current-voltage curves is demonstrated. Room-temperature and low-temperature measurements were performed on these composite films under strains using a remote-controlled, custom-made step motor bench.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9783319007403
Publication date:
Author: Samuel David Littlejohn
Publisher: Springer an imprint of Springer International Publishing
Format: Hardback
Pagination: 166 pages
Series: Springer Theses
Genres: Condensed matter physics (liquid state and solid state physics)
Engineering applications of electronic, magnetic, optical materials
Nanosciences
Nanotechnology
Materials science