Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications

Abstract This paper evaluates the potential usage of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene (graphene/XLPE) as the insulating material for high voltage direct current (HVDC) cables. Thermal, mechanical and electrical properties of blends with/without graphene were evaluated by differential scanning calor...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yuan Li, Guangya Zhu, Kai Zhou, Pengfei Meng, Guodong Wang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-09-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-97328-x
id doaj-b8fa3c2127084ddaa5b31ee032725793
record_format Article
spelling doaj-b8fa3c2127084ddaa5b31ee0327257932021-09-19T11:31:41ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-09-011111810.1038/s41598-021-97328-xEvaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applicationsYuan Li0Guangya Zhu1Kai Zhou2Pengfei Meng3Guodong Wang4College of Electrical Engineering, Sichuan UniversityCollege of Electrical Engineering, Sichuan UniversityCollege of Electrical Engineering, Sichuan UniversityCollege of Electrical Engineering, Sichuan UniversityCollege of Electrical Engineering, Sichuan UniversityAbstract This paper evaluates the potential usage of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene (graphene/XLPE) as the insulating material for high voltage direct current (HVDC) cables. Thermal, mechanical and electrical properties of blends with/without graphene were evaluated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), tensile strength, DC conductivity, space charge measurements and water tree aging test. The results indicate that 0.007–0.008% weight amount of graphene can improve the mechanical and electrical insulation properties of XLPE blends, namely higher tensile/yield strength, improved space charge distribution, and shorter/fewer water tree branches. The improvements mainly attribute to the high stiffness of graphene, deep traps introduced by the interaction zones of graphene and XLPE, and the blockage effect of graphene within XLPE. For thermal performance of XLPE blends, graphene nano-fillers have but limited improvement. The crystallinity of the blends barely changes with the addition of graphene. However, the crosslinking degree increases as the additive-like amounts of graphene doped. The above findings provide a guide for tailoring lightweight XLPE materials with excellent mechanical and electrical performances by doping them with a small amount of graphene.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-97328-x
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yuan Li
Guangya Zhu
Kai Zhou
Pengfei Meng
Guodong Wang
spellingShingle Yuan Li
Guangya Zhu
Kai Zhou
Pengfei Meng
Guodong Wang
Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
Scientific Reports
author_facet Yuan Li
Guangya Zhu
Kai Zhou
Pengfei Meng
Guodong Wang
author_sort Yuan Li
title Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
title_short Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
title_full Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
title_fullStr Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
title_sort evaluation of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene for potential high voltage direct current cable insulation applications
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-09-01
description Abstract This paper evaluates the potential usage of graphene/crosslinked polyethylene (graphene/XLPE) as the insulating material for high voltage direct current (HVDC) cables. Thermal, mechanical and electrical properties of blends with/without graphene were evaluated by differential scanning calorimetry (DSC), tensile strength, DC conductivity, space charge measurements and water tree aging test. The results indicate that 0.007–0.008% weight amount of graphene can improve the mechanical and electrical insulation properties of XLPE blends, namely higher tensile/yield strength, improved space charge distribution, and shorter/fewer water tree branches. The improvements mainly attribute to the high stiffness of graphene, deep traps introduced by the interaction zones of graphene and XLPE, and the blockage effect of graphene within XLPE. For thermal performance of XLPE blends, graphene nano-fillers have but limited improvement. The crystallinity of the blends barely changes with the addition of graphene. However, the crosslinking degree increases as the additive-like amounts of graphene doped. The above findings provide a guide for tailoring lightweight XLPE materials with excellent mechanical and electrical performances by doping them with a small amount of graphene.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-97328-x
work_keys_str_mv AT yuanli evaluationofgraphenecrosslinkedpolyethyleneforpotentialhighvoltagedirectcurrentcableinsulationapplications
AT guangyazhu evaluationofgraphenecrosslinkedpolyethyleneforpotentialhighvoltagedirectcurrentcableinsulationapplications
AT kaizhou evaluationofgraphenecrosslinkedpolyethyleneforpotentialhighvoltagedirectcurrentcableinsulationapplications
AT pengfeimeng evaluationofgraphenecrosslinkedpolyethyleneforpotentialhighvoltagedirectcurrentcableinsulationapplications
AT guodongwang evaluationofgraphenecrosslinkedpolyethyleneforpotentialhighvoltagedirectcurrentcableinsulationapplications
_version_ 1717375717351620608