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1.
The reaction‐induced phase separation in epoxy/aromatic diamine formulations simultaneously modified with two immiscible thermoplastics (TPs), poly(ether imide) (PEI) and polysulfone (PSF), has been studied. The epoxy monomer was based on the diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) and the aromatic diamine was 4,4′‐methylenebis(3‐chloro 2,6‐diethylaniline) (MCDEA). Phase‐separation conversions are reported for various PSF/PEI proportions for blends containing 10 wt% total TP. On the basis of phase‐separation results, a conversion–composition phase diagram at 200 °C was compiled. This diagram was used to design particular cure cycles in order to generate different morphologies during the phase‐separation process. It was found that, depending on the PSF/PEI ratio employed, a particulate or a morphology characterized by a distribution of irregular PEI‐rich domains dispersed in an epoxy‐rich phase was obtained for initially miscible blends. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) characterization revealed that the PEI‐rich phase exhibits a phase‐inverted structure and the epoxy‐rich matrix presents a bimodal size distribution of TP‐rich particles. For PSF/PEI ratios near the miscibility limit, slight temperature change result in morphology profiles. Copyright © 2005 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

2.
In this article, the particular phase morphology of immiscible polyamide 12/polystyrene (PA12/PS) blends prepared via in situ anionic ring‐opening polymerization of laurolactam (LL) in the presence of polystyrene (PS) was investigated. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and Fourier Transform infrared Spectroscopy (FTIR) were used to analyze the morphology of the blends. The results show that the PS is dispersed as small droplets in the continuous matrix of PA12 when PS content is 5 wt%. However, when the PS content is higher than 10 wt%, two particular phase morphologies appeared. Firstly, dispersed PS‐rich particles with the spherical inclusions of PA12 can be found when PS content is between 10 and 15 wt%. Then the phase inversion occurred (the phase morphology of the PA12/PS blends changed from the PS dispersed/PA12 matrix to PA12 dispersed/PS matrix system) when PS content is 20 wt% or higher, which is unusual for polymer blends prepared via conventional methods such as mixing, hydrolytic polycondensation and so on. The formation of this particular phase morphology development was simply elucidated via a phase inversion mechanism. Furthermore, the stability of the phase morphology of the PA12/PS blends after annealing at 230°C was also investigated via SEM. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 52:1831–1838, 2012. © 2012 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

3.
The curing behaviour, chemorheology, morphology and dynamic mechanical properties of epoxy ? polyphenylene oxide (PPO) blends were investigated over a wide range of compositions. Two bisphenol A based di‐epoxides ? pure and oligomeric DGEBA ? were used and their cure with primary, tertiary and quaternary amines was studied. 4,4′‐methylenebis(3‐chloro‐2,6‐diethylaniline) (MCDEA) showed high levels of cure and gave the highest exotherm peak temperature, and so was chosen for blending studies. Similarly pure DGEBA was selected for blending due to its slower reaction rate because of the absence of accelerating hydroxyl groups. For the PPO:DGEBA340/MCDEA system, the reaction rate was reduced with increasing PPO content due to a dilution effect but the heat of reaction were not significantly affected. The rheological behaviour during cure indicated that phase separation occurred prior to gelation, followed by vitrification. The times for phase separation, gelation and vitrification increased with higher PPO levels due to a reduction in the rate of polymerization. Dynamic mechanical thermal analysis of PPO:DGEBA340/MCDEA clearly showed two glass transitions due to the presence of phase separated regions where the lower Tg corresponded to an epoxy‐rich phase and the higher Tg represented the PPO‐rich phase. SEM observations of the cured PPO:DGEBA340/MCDEA blends revealed PPO particles in an epoxy matrix for blends with 10 wt% PPO, co‐continuous morphology for the blend with 30 wt% PPO and epoxy‐rich particles dispersed in a PPO‐rich matrix for 40wt% and more PPO. © 2014 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

4.
I.A. Zucchi 《Polymer》2005,46(8):2603-2609
Polystyrene (PS, Mn=28,400, PI=1.07), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA, Mn=88,600, PI=1.03), and PS (50,000)-b-PMMA (54,000) (PI=1.04), were used as modifiers of an epoxy formulation based on diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) and m-xylylene diamine (MXDA). Both PS and PMMA were initially miscible in the stoichiometric mixture of DGEBA and MXDA at 80 °C, but were phase separated in the course of polymerization. Solutions containing 5 wt% of each one of both linear polymers exhibited a double phase separation. A PS-rich phase was segregated at a conversion close to 0.02 and a PMMA rich phase was phase separated at a conversion close to 0.2. Final morphologies, observed by scanning electron microscopy (SEM), consisted on a separate dispersion of PS and PMMA domains. A completely different morphology was observed when employing 10 wt% of PS-b-PMMA as modifier. PS blocks with Mn=50,000 were not soluble in the initial formulation. However, they were dispersed as micelles stabilized by the miscible PMMA blocks, leading to a transparent solution up to the conversion where PMMA blocks began to phase separate. A coalescence of the micellar structure into a continuous thermoplastic phase percolating the epoxy matrix was observed. The elastic modulus and yield stress of the cured blend modified by both PS and PMMA were 2.64 GPa and 97.2 MPa, respectively. For the blend modified by an equivalent amount of block copolymer these values were reduced to 2.14 GPa and 90.0 MPa. Therefore, using a block copolymer instead of the mixture of individual homopolymers and selecting an appropriate epoxy-amine formulation to provoke phase separation of the miscible block well before gelation, enables to transform a micellar structure into a bicontinuous thermoplastic/thermoset structure that exhibits the desired decrease in yield stress necessary for toughening purposes.  相似文献   

5.
Core–shell polybutadiene‐graft‐polystyrene (PB‐g‐PS) rubber particles with different ratios of polybutadiene to polystyrene were prepared by emulsion polymerization through grafting styrene onto polybutadiene latex. The weight ratio of polybutadiene to polystyrene ranged from 50/50 to 90/10. These core‐shell rubber particles were then blended with polystyrene to prepare PS/PB‐g‐PS blends with a constant rubber content of 20 wt%. PB‐g‐PS particles with a lower PB/PS ratio (≤70/30) form a homogeneous dispersion in the polystyrene matrix, and the Izod notched impact strength of these blends is higher than that of commercial high‐impact polystyrene (HIPS). It is generally accepted that polystyrene can only be toughened effectively by 1–3 µm rubber particles through a toughening mechanism of multiple crazings. However, the experimental results show that polystyrene can actually be toughened by monodisperse sub‐micrometer rubber particles. Scanning electron micrographs of the fracture surface and stress‐whitening zone of blends with a PB/PS ratio of 70/30 in PB‐g‐PS copolymer reveal a novel toughening mechanism of modified polystyrene, which may be shear yielding of the matrix, promoted by cavitation. Subsequently, a compression‐induced activation method was explored to compare the PS/PB‐g‐PS blends with commercial HIPS, and the result show that the toughening mechanisms of the two samples are different. Copyright © 2006 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

6.
Summary The homopolymerization of an epoxy resin based on diglycidylether of bisphenol A (DGEBA), initiated by benzyldimethylamine (BDMA), was analyzed in the 80°C–140°C temperature range. An heterogeneous network characterized by regions of different glass transition temperature, was obtained. Microgels appeared early in the polymerization while an increase in the reactivity of the second epoxy group of a DGEBA molecule after reaction of the first one, was inferred from size exclusion chromatograms (SEC), obtained at different overall conversions. Both experimental findings were qualitatively explained through an intramolecular chain transfer step that regenerates the initiator in the proximity of pendant epoxy groups. The increase in the polymerization temperature produced an increase in the macroscopic gel conversion and a decrease in the glass transition temperature of regions of high crosslink density. This was ascribed to the increase in the ratio of intramolecular chain transfer over propagation rates, leading to shorter primary chains.  相似文献   

7.
BACKGROUND: Sub‐micrometer core‐shell polybutadiene‐graft‐polystyrene (PB‐g‐PS) copolymers with various ratios of polybutadiene (PB) core to polystyrene (PS) shell were synthesized by emulsion grafting polymerization with 1,2‐azobisisobutyronitrile (AIBN) as initiator. These graft copolymers were blended with PS to prepare PS/PB‐g‐PS with a rubber content of 20 wt%. The mechanical properties, morphologies of the core‐shell rubber particles and deformation mechanisms under various conditions were investigated. RESULTS: Infrared spectroscopic analysis confirmed that PS could be grafted onto the PB rubber particles. The experimental results showed that a specimen with a ‘cluster’ dispersion state of rubber particles in the PS matrix displayed better mechanical properties. Transmission electron micrographs suggested that crazing only occurred from rubber particles and extended in a bridge‐like manner to neighboring rubber particles parallel to the equatorial plane at a high speed for failure specimens, while the interaction between crazing and shear yielding stabilized the growing crazes at a low speed in tensile tests. CONCLUSION: AIBN can be used as an initiator in the graft polymerization of styrene onto PB. The dispersion of rubber particles in a ‘cluster’ state leads to better impact resistance. The deformation mechanism in impact tests was multi‐crazing, and crazing and shear yielding absorbed the energy in tensile experiments. Copyright © 2009 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

8.
Low molar mass poly (phenylene ether) (LMW‐PPE) with phenol‐reactive chain ends was used as modifier of epoxy thermoset. The epoxy monomer was diglycidylether of bisphenol A (DGEBA), and several imidazoles were used as initiators of anionic polymerization. The curing and phase separation processes were investigated by different techniques: Differential Scanning Calorimetry, Size Exclusion Chromatography, and Light Transmission measurements. The final morphology of blends was observed by Environmental Scanning Electron Microscopy and Transmission Electron Microscopy. The epoxy network is obtained by imidazole initiated DGEBA homopolymerization. Initial LMW‐PPE/DGEBA mixtures show an UCST behavior with cloud point temperatures between 40 and 90°C. PPE phenol end‐groups can react with epoxy, leading to a better interaction between phases. The curing mechanism and phase separation process are not influenced by the chemical structure of initiators, except when reactive amine groups are present. The phase inversion is observed at 30 wt % of PPE. The mixtures with amine‐substituted imidazole present important differences in the initial miscibility and curing process interpreted in terms of fast room temperature amine‐epoxy reaction during blending. Final domain size is affected by this prereaction. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 93: 2678–2687, 2004  相似文献   

9.
Flexible and transparent epoxy resin is fabricated by adding modified resin (MR) into diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA). The MR is prepared by the ring‐opening of the epoxy functional group of the DGEBA. The mechanical properties of the epoxy resin are tuned by adjusting the weight ratio of MR to DGEBA. When the MR content is 25 wt%, the elongation at break and the tensile strength of the epoxy resin can reach 69.1% and 27.0 MPa, respectively. Cured blends of DGEBA and MR are characterized using scanning electron microscopy, dynamic mechanical analysis and thermogravimetric analysis to reveal the mechanism of improving the flexibility of the epoxy resin while maintaining excellent transparency. © 2016 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

10.
Blends of polystyrene (PS) and poly(dimethylsiloxane) (PDMS), with and without diblock copolymers (PS‐b‐PDMS), were prepared by melt mixing. The melt rheology behavior of the blends was studied with a capillary rheometer. The morphology of the blends was examined with scanning electron microscopy. The miscibility of the blends was studied with differential scanning calorimetry. The morphology of PS/PDMS blends was modified by the addition of PS‐b‐PDMS copolymers and investigated as a function of the molar mass of the diblock copolymers, viscosity ratios and the processing conditions. As investigated, the observed morphology of the melt‐blended PS/PDMS pair unambiguously supported the interfacial activity of the diblock copolymers. When a few percent of the diblock copolymers blended together with the PS and PDMS homopolymers, the phase size was reduced and the phase dispersion was firmly stabilized against coalescence. The compatibilizing efficiency of the copolymers was strongly dependent on its molar mass. © 2004 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 92: 2747–2757, 2004  相似文献   

11.
The poly(sily ether) with pendant chloromethyl groups (PSE) was synthesized by the polyaddition of dichloromethylsilane (DCM) and diglycidylether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) with tetrabutylammonium chloride (TBAC) as a catalyst. This polymer was miscible with diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA), the precursor of epoxy resin. The miscibility is considered to be due mainly to entropy contribution because the molecular weight of DGEBA is quite low. The blends of epoxy resin with PSE were prepared through in situ curing reaction of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA) and 4,4′‐diaminodiphenylmethane (DDM) in the presence of PSE. The DDM‐cured epoxy resin/PSE blends with PSE content up to 40 wt % were obtained. The reaction started from the initial homogeneous ternary mixture of DGEBA/DDM/PSE. With curing proceeding, phase separation induced by polymerization occurred. PSE was immiscible with the 4,4′‐diaminodiphenylmethane‐cured epoxy resin (ER) because the blends exhibited two separate glass transition temperatures (Tgs) as revealed by the means of differential scanning calorimetry (DSC) and dynamic mechanical analysis (DMA). SEM showed that all the ER/PSE blends are heterogeneous. Depending on blend composition, the blends can display PSE‐ or epoxy‐dispersed morphologies, respectively. The mechanical test showed that the DDM‐cured ER/PSE blend containing 25 wt % PSE displayed a substantial improvement in Izod impact strength, i.e., epoxy resin was significantly toughened. The improvement in impact toughness corresponded to the formation of PSE‐dispersed phase structure. © 2003 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 89: 505–512, 2003  相似文献   

12.
This article investigates the room temperature demixing of oil‐in‐oil emulsions containing styrene (St), polybutadiene (PB), a St‐butadiene star block copolymer (BC), and two polystyrene (PS) samples of different molecular weights and is a contribution toward a better understanding of the stability/instability of the reaction mixture in a bulk high‐impact polystyrene (HIPS) process close to the phase inversion. Twelve bulk prepolymerizations of St in the presence of PB were emulated, at 10%, 15%, and 20% conversion; and with constant grafting efficiencies. All the blends contained 6% in weight of butadiene units. After stirring the blends for 24 h, the decantation demixing process was monitored along 30 days, with daily measurement of the interface levels after appearance of a clear interface. For some of the isolated phases, their unswollen morphologies were observed by transmission electron microscopy. All the isolated phases exhibited macrophase separation into homopolymer‐ and copolymer‐rich macrodomains with lamellar microdomains. The BC showed a greater affinity toward the PS‐rich phase. The separation of an independent BC‐rich phase in the blends containing the high molar mass PS and at high grafting efficiencies, modifies the idea of the graft‐ or BC molecules located at the interface of large PS‐rich and PB‐rich phases. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 2013. © 2013 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

13.
The effect of two different bisphenol‐A‐based diepoxides—nearly pure DGEBA340 and a DGEBA381 oligomer—and an aromatic diamine curative (MCDEA) on the solubility and processability of poly(phenylene oxide) (PPO) was studied. The solubility parameters of the diepoxies and the curative calculated from Fedors's method suggest miscibility of PPO with the components, and this was observed at the processing temperature; however, some of the blends were not transparent at room temperature, indicating phase immiscibility and/or partial PPO crystallization. The steady shear and dynamic viscosities of the systems agreed well with the Cox–Merz relationship and the logarithmic viscosities decreased approximately linearly with increasing amounts of DGEBA381, DGEBA340 or MCDEA, thus causing a processability enhancement of the PPO. The dynamic rheology of intermediate PPO:DGEBA compositions at 200 °C showed gel‐like behaviour. Dynamic mechanical analysis of blends with varying PPO:DGEBA ratios showed that the main glass transition temperature (Tg) of the blends decreased continuously with increasing epoxy content, with a slightly higher plasticizing efficiency being exhibited by DGEBA340 compared to DGEBA381. However, blends with 50 and 60 wt% PPO had almost identical Tg due to the phase separation of the former blends. The blends of MCDEA and PPO were miscible over the concentration range investigated and Tg of the blends decreased with increasing MCDEA concentration. © 2013 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

14.
The core–shell particles considered were poly(butyl acrylate) core/epoxy groups functionalizing the poly(methyl methacrylate) shell. Physical and thermomechanical properties of benzyl dimethylamine (BDMA)‐catalyzed diglycidyl ether of bisphenol A (DGEBA)/dicyandiamine epoxy networks toughened with core–shell particles were studied. The blends were prepared under well‐defined processing conditions. The resulting properties were found to depend on the state of the dispersion of the particles in the prepolymer matrix before crosslinking. These particles were dispersed at different volume fractions in order to vary the interparticle distance. The relationships between the size of the core–shell particles and the level of toughening are reported. Static mechanical tests were performed in tension and compression modes on these core–shell polyepoxy blends. A slight decrease in the Young's modulus and an increase in the ability to plastic deformation were observed. Using linear fracture mechanics (LEFM), an improvement of the fracture properties (KIC) was measured. By varying the volume fraction of core–shell particles, an optimum toughness improvement was found for an interparticle distance equal to 400 nm (with an average particle size of 600 nm). © 1999 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci 72: 849–858, 1999  相似文献   

15.
The nanolatex of polystyrene (PS) synthesized by differential microemulsion polymerization was blended with (vinyl acetate)‐ethylene (VAE) copolymer emulsion at VAE/PS dry weight ratios of 90/10, 80/20, 70/30, and 60/40. This technique provided a well dispersion of PS nanoparticles in the blends without any phase separation or flocculation. The blended emulsions were cast into thin sheet for further characterizations. It was found that the tensile strength, Young's modulus, dynamic mechanical properties, and thermal stability at 50% degradation of VAE were increased by the addition of an appropriate amount (20, 30, 40, and 40 wt%, respectively) of the PS nanoparticles, whereas the elongation at break deteriorated. J. VINYL ADDIT. TECHNOL., 2012. © 2012 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

16.
The rheological and mechanical properties of a polystyrene‐polyisobutylene‐polystyrene (SIBS) block copolymer containing 30 wt% polystyrene (PS) and its blends with PS (SIBS/PS) were investigated. Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) was used to visualize the nanostructured phase morphology of the SIBS, which is responsible for the mechanical strength of this thermoplastic rubber. The order‐disorder transition (ODT) for the SIBS block copolymer was found to be above 250°C. SIBS/PS blends with 10–30 wt% PS showed improved moduli and tensile strengths. Blends containing up to 40 wt% PS behaved as thermoplastic elastomers. In the region of linear viscoelasticity the blends revealed pronounced non‐Newtonian behavior and enhanced elasticity. This paper also reports the role of this styrenic block copolymer in the impact modification of PS.  相似文献   

17.
Micron‐sized, cross‐linked polystyrene (PS) particles with different morphologies were prepared by the developed dispersion polymerization. By scanning electron microscope (SEM) observation, it was found that these PS particles had interesting shapes such as deformed sphere, hollow hemisphere and spheroid‐like shape when initial monomer concentration, reaction time, and temperature and addition way of the reagent added in the third stage were different. The shape of the PS particles was changed from hollow hemisphere to spheroid‐like shape with prolongation of the reaction time. It was remarkable that the rough surface of hollow‐hemisphere‐like PS particles became smooth and the hollow structure of smooth‐hollow‐hemisphere‐like PS particles grew into solid structure at the same time. The formation mechanism behind these phenomena was discussed. POLYM. ENG. SCI., 2011. © 2011 Society of Plastics Engineers  相似文献   

18.
Rubber‐toughened polystyrene has been extensively studied and is a well‐established technology. However, the use of thermoplastic elastomers to toughen polystyrene (PS) is new and has the potential for further investigations. In the present study, three EVAs (ethylene–vinyl acetate copolymers) with identical melt flow indices (MFIs), of ~2.5 dgmin?1, but different vinyl acetate (VA) contents, of 9.3 wt% (EVA760), 18.0 wt% (EVA460) and 28.0 wt% (EVA265), were melt blended with PS at 180 °C, and various ASTM test pieces were injection moulded at 200 °C. The polarity of the dispersed phase (ie EVA), has a significant effect on the mechanical properties of the blends. Both mechanical and rheological studies reveal that the uncompatibilised PS/EVA265 blends exhibit some degree of compatibility when the amount of EVA265 is lower than 30 wt%. These results indicate that EVA265 with the highest VA content is the most effective impact modifier for PS. The results clearly show that increasing the VA content in EVA increases the polarity of the dispersed phase, approaching that of the matrix (ie PS) and subsequently improving the compatibility between the two phases in terms of interfacial adhesion. © 2002 Society of Chemical Industry  相似文献   

19.
Kunyan Wang  Yu Zhang 《Polymer》2009,50(6):1483-1490
Poly(trimethylene terephthalate)/polybutadiene grafted polymetyl methacrylate (PB-g-PMMA, MB) blends were prepared by melt processing with varying weight ratios (0-5 wt%) of diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA) epoxy resin as a reactive compatibilizer. DMA result showed PTT was partially miscible with MB particles in the presence of the compatibilizer. Fourier transform infrared (FTIR) and rheological measurements further identified the reactions between PTT and DGEBA epoxy resin. Scanning electron microscopy (SEM) displayed that the core-shell structured modifiers exhibit a smaller dispersed domain size with the addition of DGEBA epoxy resin. Mechanical tests showed the impact and tensile properties of PTT blends are improved by the introduction of DGEBA epoxy resin to the blends. SEM and TEM results showed shear yielding of PTT matrix and cavitation of rubber particles were the major toughening mechanisms.  相似文献   

20.
In this article, a particular phase morphology of immiscible polyamide 12/polystyrene (PA12/PS) blends prepared via in situ anionic ring-opening polymerization of Laurolactam (LL) in the presence of PS was investigated. SEM and FTIR were used to analyze the morphology of the blends. The results showed that PS is dispersed as small droplets in the continuous matrix of PA12 when PS content is less than 5 wt %. When the PS content is higher than 10 wt %, two particular phase morphologies appeared. First, dispersed PS-rich particles with the spherical inclusions of PA12 can be found when PS content is between 10 wt % and 15 wt %. Then, the phase inversion (the phase morphology of the PA12/PS blends changes from the PS dispersed/PA12 matrix to PA12 dispersed/PS matrix system) occurred when PS content is higher than 20 wt %, which is completely different from traditional polymer blends prepared by melt blending. The possible reason for the particular morphology development was illuminated through phase inversion mechanism. Furthermore, the stability of the phase morphologies of the PA12/PS blends was also investigated. SEM showed that the particular morphology is instability, and it will be changed upon annealing at 230°C for 30 min. © 2012 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Appl Polym Sci, 2012  相似文献   

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