The
molecular orientation effect of a liquid crystalline (LC) epoxy
resin (LCER) on thermal conductivity was investigated, with the thermal
conductivity depending on the surface free energy of amorphous soda–lime–silica
glass substrate surfaces modified using physical surface treatments.
The LC epoxy monomer was revealed to form a smectic A (SmA) phase
with homeotropic alignments on the surfaces of substrates that possess
high surface free energies of 71.3 and 72.7 mN m
–1
, but forming a planar alignment on the surface of a substrate that
possesses a relatively low surface free energy of 46.3 mN m
–1
. The optical microscopy observations and the X-ray analyses revealed
that the LC epoxy monomer also induced a homeotropically aligned SmA
structure due to cross-linking with a curing agent on the high-free-energy
surface. The orientational order parameter of the resulting homeotropic
SmA structure was calculated from the grazing incidence small-angle
X-ray scattering patterns to be 0.73–0.75. The thermal conductivity
of the cross-linked LCER forming a homeotropically aligned SmA structure
was also estimated to be 2.0 and 5.8 W m
–1
K
–1
for the average and maximum in the direction of the
Sm layer normal. The value of the thermal conductivity was remarkable
among the thermosetting polymers and ceramic glass, and the LCER could
be applied for high-thermal-conductive adhesives and packaging materials
in electrical and electronic devices.