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Article Abstract

In this study, paraffin wax (PW) was combined with fumed silica (FS) as a porous support and FeO-incorporated expanded graphite (EG@FeO) as a thermal conductivity enhancer and multifunctional thermal conversion agent. This combination resulted in the development of PW/FS/EG@FeO composite phase change materials (CPCMs) with varying PW content (60-80%). FS provided ample space to stabilize a significant amount of PW (up to 75%) without liquid leakage. The crystallization fractions of the confined PW exceeded 97%, outperforming most reported values for other PCMs confined in SiO-based materials and enabling high phase change enthalpies (, 146.1 J g for the composite with 75% PW). The thermal conductivities of the 60-80% PW CPCMs were significantly enhanced to 2.215-1.395 W (m K), representing an increase of 9.8-6.2 times compared to pristine PW. Additionally, EG@FeO endowed the CPCMs with electrothermal and magnetothermal conversion capabilities due to the high electrical conductivity of EG and the superparamagnetism of FeO. Experimental testing of the 75% PW composite demonstrated its ability to exceed its melting point under the application of either a DC voltage or an alternating magnetic field. When used as a heat pack, the 75% PW CPCM maintained a consistent heat release within the 50-55 °C range for 12 minutes on a volunteer's back, meeting and surpassing the requirements for high-temperature thermotherapy. Overall, the combination of high thermal conductivity, substantial phase change enthalpy, excellent cycling durability, and multifunctional thermal conversion makes PW/FS/EG@FeO CPCMs highly promising for practical thermotherapy applications.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11987084PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d5ra00438aDOI Listing

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