Electrical performance in nanocarbon films is determined by one thing: whether electrons can flow uninterrupted from one side to the other. Surfactant barriers, agglomerate voids, and damaged carbon structures all break the network. Flexiphene™ builds it complete — delivering 0.09 MΩ resistance where standard dispersions measure 10+ MΩ.
Conductive nanocarbon films work through percolation: electrons hop from particle to particle through a network that spans the electrode. Every break in the network — every surfactant barrier, every void from agglomeration, every defect from acid damage — forces electrons to take a longer, higher-resistance path. The resistance of the film reflects the quality of the network.
A conductive film requires a connected network that spans the entire electrode. Flexiphene™'s Flexiphene™ nanocarbon architecture forms a 3D interconnected structure: The 2D nanocarbon component provides lateral coverage, CNTs bridge vertically and laterally between sheets. No voids, no breaks.
Every contact between nanocarbon particles has junction resistance. Surfactant molecules at these junctions act as tunneling barriers — dramatically increasing junction resistance. Flexiphene™'s surfactant-free surfaces make direct carbon-carbon contact at every junction, minimizing this bottleneck.
Planar nanocarbon components alone have high resistance due to sp³ defects from functional groups. Nanotubes alone can bundle, leaving gaps in the network. Together, the planar component provides area coverage while nanotubes span across boundaries, creating electron superhighways through the 2D scaffold. Flexiphene™ outperforms either component in isolation.
Longer CNTs span more junctions per tube. An intact 10 µm tube bridges 10 potential gaps; a 1 µm acid-shortened tube bridges just 1. This is why structural integrity (Mechanism 2) directly amplifies electron pathway performance — the mechanisms reinforce each other.
High capacitance (50 µF vs. 0.52 µF) reflects the large electrochemically accessible surface area in the Flexiphene™ network. More accessible surface area means more charge storage capacity and more stable electrode potential — directly causing the 95× drift reduction.
Thermal or chemical reduction of the nanocarbon component converts insulating sp³ regions to conductive sp² graphene — further reducing resistance in the completed film. This is Mechanism 5 (Easily Reducible) working in concert with the pathway architecture established here.
| Electrical Property | Broken Network (Standard) | Complete Network (Flexiphene™) | Improvement |
|---|---|---|---|
| Electrical Resistance | 10+ MΩ | 0.09 ± 0.03 MΩ | 100× Lower |
| Capacitance | 0.52 µF | 50 µF | 96× Higher |
| EMF Drift Rate | 1900 µV/s | 20 ± 8 µV/s | 95× More Stable |
| 4-Month Performance Retention | Degrades rapidly | 83% retained | Stable network |
Source: Noell et al., Electroanalysis (2020). NASA Jet Propulsion Laboratory / California Institute of Technology. Peer-reviewed.
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