Publications

Journal articles

July 2019

Natural Carbon By‐Products for Transparent Heaters: The Case of Steam‐Cracker Tar

Owen P. Morris, Xining Zang, Aoife Gregg, Brent Keller, Bezawit Getachew, Samuel Ingersoll, Heather A. Elsen, Mark M. Disko, Nicola Ferralis, Jeffrey C. Grossman

Abstract

Steam-cracker tar (SCT) is a by-product of ethylene production that is in massive quantities globally (>150 × 106 tons per year). With few useful applications, the production of unwanted SCT leads to the need for its costly disposal or burning at the boiler plant. The discovery of new uses for SCT would therefore bring both economic and environmental benefits, although, to date, efforts toward employing SCT in diverse applications have been limited, and progress is further hampered by a lack of understanding of the material itself. Although complex and highly heterogeneous in nature, the molecular composition of SCT has the potential to serve as a diverse and tunable feedstock for wide-ranging applications. Here, a simple solution-processing method for SCT that allows its conductivity and optical properties to be controlled over orders of magnitude is reported. Here, by way of example, the focus is on the production of transparent conductive thin films, which exhibit a wide range of transparencies (23-93%) and sheet resistances (2.5 Ω □-1 to 1.2 kΩ □-1 ) that are tuned by a combination of solution concentration and thermal annealing. As transparent Joule heaters, even without optimization, these SCT devices show competitive performance compared to established technologies such as those based on reduced graphene oxide, and surpass the temperature stability limit of other materials. Furthermore, it is demonstrated that laser annealing can be used to process the SCT films and directly pattern transparent heaters on an arbitrary substrate. These results highlight the potential of SCT as a feedstock material for electronic applications and suggest that broader classes of either naturally occurring carbon or produced carbonaceous by-products could prove useful in a range of applications.

Acknowledgements

This research was supported by ExxonMobil Research and Engineering and the MIT Energy Initiative Low‐Carbon Energy Centers (Grant EM09079), and O.P.M. thanks the ExxonMobil Energy Fellow Program for partial support. This work made use of the MRSEC Shared Experimental Facilities at MIT, supported by the National Science Foundation under award number DMR‐14‐19807. Sheet resistance measurements and sputtering of electrodes were performed at the Center for Nanoscale Systems (CNS), a member of the National Nanotechnology Coordinated Infrastructure Network (NNCI), which is supported by the National Science Foundation under NSF award no. 1541959. CNS is part of Harvard University. Conflict of Interest The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Department Head and Professor
Department of Materials Science and Engineering

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