Study of flexible nanodielectric materials (FNDMs) with high permittivity is one of the most active academic research areas in advanced functional materials. FNDMs with excellent dielectric properties are demonstrated to show great promise as energy-storage dielectric layers in high-performance capacitors. These materials, in common, consist of nanoscale particles dispersed into a flexible polymer matrix so that both the physical/chemical characteristics of the nanoparticles and the interaction between the nanoparticles and the polymers have crucial effects on the microstructures and final properties. This review first outlines the crucial issues in the nanodielectric field and then focuses on recent remarkable research developments in the fabrication of FNDMs with special constitutents, molecular structures, and microstructures. Possible reasons for several persistent issues are analyzed and the general strategies to realize FNDMs with excellent integral properties are summarized. The review further highlights some exciting examples of these FNDMs for power-energy-storage applications.
Dielectric properties of poly(vinylidene fluoride) (PVDF) based nanocomposites filled with surface hydroxylated BaTiO(3) (h-BT) nanoparticles were reported. The h-BT fillers were prepared from crude BaTiO(3) (c-BT) in aqueous solution of H(2)O(2). Results showed that the dielectric properties of the h-BT/PVDF nanocomposites had weaker temperature and frequency dependences than that of c-BT/PVDF nanocomposites. Meanwhile, the h-BT/PVDF composites showed lower loss tangent and higher dielectric strength. It is suggested that the strong interaction between h-BT fillers and PVDF matrix is the main reason for the improved dielectric properties.
Authors are grateful to Mrs. F. Garnier and P. Gemeiner for the SEM investigations and Raman measurements, and Mr. P. Haghi-Ashtiani for the TEM characterizations. J.-K.Y. also gratefully acknowledges the financial support of China Scholarship Council.
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