Thermally Conductive Naphthalene Epoxy Resin by Tailoring Flexible Chain Length and Liquid Crystal Structure
SS Wang and KP Ruan and YQ Guo and J Kong and JW Gu, ANGEWANDTE CHEMIE- INTERNATIONAL EDITION, 64, e202501459 (2025).
DOI: 10.1002/anie.202501459
Epoxy resins with high thermal conductivity (lambda) are widely used in electronic packaging, bonding, and coating. However, those with high intrinsic lambda, typically synthesized using biphenyl or aromatic rings extended by ester linkages as the mesogenic unit, often exhibit high liquid crystal transition temperatures and poor processability. In this study, a series of naphthalene-based liquid crystal epoxy monomers (LCEs) were synthesized, using naphthalene as the mesogenic unit and modifying the flexible chain length on both sides. The resulting LCEs were cured within its liquid crystal phase to form naphthalene liquid crystal epoxy resin (LCER). The results show that the network order, radius of gyration, and low-frequency vibrational density of states all initially increase and then decrease with increasing flexible chain length. For LCER2, with a three-carbon flexible chain, these parameters reach their maximum values, facilitating phonon diffusion and enhancing lambda. The liquid crystal transition temperature, lambda, heat resistance index, and storage modulus of LCER2 were 67-78 degrees C, 0.40 W m-1 K-1, 158.8 degrees C, and 2059 MPa, respectively, approximately 2.2 times higher than that of E-51 resin (0.18 W m-1 K-1). This work offers insights into designing epoxy resins with low liquid crystal transition temperature, high intrinsic lambda, and excellent mechanical properties for thermal management.
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