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THE SCHOOL OF MATERIALS SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
GEORGIA INSTITUTE OF TECHNOLOGY
Under the provisions of the regulations for the degree
DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY
on Tuesday, May 19, 2020
1:00 PM
via
Blue Jeans Video Conferencing
https://bluejeans.com/819327060
will be held the
DISSERTATION PROPOSAL DEFENSE
for
Deepak Kamal
"Designing Polymers Resistant to Electric Field Extremes With Materials Modeling and Machine Learning"
Committee Members:
Prof. Rampi Ramprasad, Advisor, MSE
Prof. David L. McDowell, ME/MSE
Prof. Juan-Pablo Correa-Baena, MSE
Prof. Seung Soon Jang, MSE
Prof. Roshan Joseph, ISyE
Abstract:
Polymers have found applications as dielectrics in high energy density capacitors owing to their low-cost, flexibility, attractive insulation properties, and ease of processability. However, their “energy density”, i.e., the maximum electrostatic energy that can be stored, is rather low in most commonly used polymer capacitor dielectrics; for instance, biaxially-oriented polypropylene (BOPP), the standard material used today in energy storage capacitors, displays an energy density of about 5 J/cc. The electrostatic energy density of a dielectric is directly controlled by its dielectric constant and the dielectric breakdown strength (Ebd), i.e., the maximum electric field the material can withstand. The goal of my work is to determine factors that affect Ebd in polymers and to use this understanding to discover new polymers with better electric field resistance. Specifically, the objectives of my work include the following:
Preliminary work has been performed pertaining to Objectives 1-3 above. The proxy properties identified thus far include the band gap and the electron injection barrier height at the polymer-metal electrode interface. Search for additional proxy properties is underway. The ultimate outcome of this effort will be: (1) a comprehensive and diverse DFT based polymer property dataset, (2) understanding of the chemical factors that govern the relevant proxy properties (and dielectric breakdown), (3) recommendations of polymers that may be resistant to extreme electric fields, and (4) a powerful ML-driven autonomous computational workflow extendable to study other problems.