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Down to the wire

ASU engineers synthesize new high-performance conductor

image showing the inside of wire

Above: Technological innovation could soon be hampered by the capacity limits of traditional conductors like copper, so ASU engineering research led by Wonmo Kang has developed a new high-performance composite wire to keep the wheels of progress turning. Illustration courtesy of Shutterstock

Congressional passage of the national infrastructure investment act earlier this month means more than half a trillion dollars in new funding is designated to repair and upgrade American road networks, power grids, water systems and more.

While much of that work is remedial, there is significant need to improve the standards and specifications of existing infrastructure. For example, technological advances in electronics for communications, transportation and other fields are pushing the capacity and stability limits of conventional electrical conductors like copper. Progress really may come down to the wire available for innovation.

Wonmo Kang, an assistant professor of aerospace and mechanical engineering in the Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering at Arizona State University, says transportation offers a helpful analogy for the material limits being tested by continuous expansion of power demand in every arena of life.

“We can think of electrical current or the flow of electrons like the movement of cars on a road,” Kang says. “Traditional copper wire conductors can be compared to local city streets. They have lower current density limits, like a two-lane road’s capacity for traffic. They also have lower electron mobility, similar to urban speed limits, and discontinuous electron paths that operate like stop signs and traffic signals.”

But our increasingly wired world will soon need higher current density limits, greater electron mobility and more continuity in electron paths than copper conductors allow. In other words, we will need more superhighways rather than surface streets.

Kang says that relevant materials science research has focused on the development of carbon-metal composites to improve performance. One example combines copper with graphene, a nanomaterial with high current-carrying capability. Graphene is also chemically inert, which offers greater resistance to oxidation and corrosion compared to purely copper wire. This robust trait is important for electrical applications in harsh environmental conditions such as high temperatures.

“But existing approaches to this kind of composite wire apply relatively small-scale carbon materials, and they unavoidably have interfaces between the carbon structures as well as between the carbon and the metal,” Kang says. “Those interfaces represent discontinuities in electron paths — like stop signs or red lights — so the potential advantages of this kind of hybrid material are not being realized.”

Solving this challenge is the focus of a new research paper in the scientific journal Advanced Materials. Kang and his team at the School for Engineering of Matter, Transport and Energy, one of the seven Fulton Schools at ASU, have successfully integrated the advantages of graphene and copper into a highly effective conductor.

“After several attempts, we determined how to control the thickness, continuity and quality of the graphene in the composite,” he says. “These are the first copper wires to be coated by continuous, high-quality, thick graphene tubes, and the results surpass the performance of any previous efforts.”

Kang’s axially continuous graphene-copper, or ACGC, wire demonstrated a 450% increase in the current density breakdown limit. That represents a lot more lanes on the highway for electron traffic.

Additionally, the research reveals that the continuous graphene layers result in 41% higher electrical conductivity than purely copper wire, which is like traffic moving at much higher speeds.

Plus, the thermal stability of the new composite, or its resistance to current flow, after thermal cycles up to 450 degrees Celsius is 41% better (meaning lower) than copper wire.

Finally, the heat dissipation rate of the ACGC is 224% higher than copper, which enhances the cooling of the conductor at high current densities.

“These promising results and our fundamental understanding of the underlying mechanisms can yield a technical paradigm shift,” Kang says. “The excellent thermoelectrical properties of ACGC can offer new engineering solutions to the challenges of modern electric power systems requiring high-power transmission, including in aerospace, transportation, communications and many other industries.”

Kang says he is grateful for the work of his team members, Hamzeh Kashani and Chunghwan Kim, as well as for research funding from the Office of Naval Research. Within the ONR, he offers special thanks to program officer Ignacio Perez for his support.

Moving forward, Kang’s team will work to improve the performance of ACGC even further while reducing its manufacturing costs.

About The Author

Gary Werner

Gary Werner is a senior media relations officer for ASU Media Relations and Strategic Communications. Prior to joining Arizona State University, Gary served as communications director for a Washington state government agency, as a senior nonfiction editor for Penguin Books, and as a newspaper and magazine journalist. Gary earned bachelor’s degrees in journalism and in international affairs from the University of Colorado at Boulder, as well as a master’s degree in education from Northwest University. At the beginning of his career, Gary served for six years in the U.S. Navy’s Atlantic submarine fleet. Media Contact: [email protected] | (480) 727-5622 | Ira A. Fulton Schools of Engineering

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