Improving dielectric strength of polyvinylidene fluoride by blending chains with different molecular weights

2020 
Abstract Polyvinylidene fluoride (PVDF), as an electroactive polymer, has been attracting increasingly attention for its broad potential applications ranging from film capacitors, actuators, to energy harvesters. The capability of a PVDF film to sustain a high working voltage is highly demanded to achieve these applications. Herein, we find that blending two PVDF polymers with low and high molecular weights can achieve higher dielectric strength (Eb = 479 MV/m) than either of the two original ones (PVDF-1 with Mw of ∼180,000, Eb = 412 MV/m and PVDF-2 with Mw of ∼441,000, Eb = 391 MV/m). The underlying synergetic effect is deduced from the analysis of the crystallization of PVDF by wide-angle X-ray diffraction and small-angle X-ray scattering from a synchrotron source. It involves crystallite polymorphism, the transition of crystalline phases, the variation of crystalline lattice spacing at different strain spaces, and the long periods and the distribution of crystallite sizes. Understanding these underlying influences is beneficial to process PVDF films with desirable and reliable dielectric properties.
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