4.4 Article

Electrical, rheological, and mechanical properties copolymer/carbon black composites

Journal

JOURNAL OF VINYL & ADDITIVE TECHNOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 2, Pages 445-458

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/vnl.21818

Keywords

carbon black; copolymers; electrical conductivity; rheological and electrical percolation

Funding

  1. TJAM [426191/20161]

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This study evaluated the electrical conductivity, rheological, and mechanical properties of copolymer/carbon black conductive polymer composites. PEgMA/CB showed the highest conductivity, while BioPE/CB exhibited the best electrical performance. CB acted as a reinforcing filler, increasing the elastic modulus and tensile strength of BioPE and the copolymers.
This work aims to evaluate the electrical conductivity and the rheological and mechanical properties of copolymer/carbon black (CB) conductive polymer composites (CPCs). The copolymers, containing ethylene groups in their structure, used as matrix were polyethylene grafted with maleic anhydride (PEgMA), ethylene-methyl acrylate-glycidyl methacrylate (EMA-GMA), and ethylene-vinyl acetate (EVA). For comparison purposes, bio-based polyethylene (BioPE)/CB composites were also studied. The electrical conductivity results showed that the electrical percolation threshold of BioPE/CB composite was 0.36 volume fraction of CB, whereas the rheological percolation threshold was 0.25 volume fraction of CB. The most conductive CPC was BioPE/CB. Among the copolymer/CB CPCs, PEgMA/CB showed the highest conductivity, which can be attributed to the fact that the PEgMA copolymer had higher crystallinity. It also has a higher amount of ethylene groups in its structure. Torque rheometry analysis indicated that EMA-GMA copolymer may have reacted with CB. Rheological measurements under oscillatory shear flow indicated the formation of a percolated network in BioPE/CB and copolymer/CB composites. Morphology analysis by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) indicated the formation of a percolated network structure in BioPE/CB composite and finely dispersed CB particles within the PEgMA copolymer. Wetting of CB particles/agglomerates by the copolymer matrix was observed in EVA/CB and EMA-GMA/CB composites. Conductive CB acted as reinforcing filler as it increased the elastic modulus and tensile strength of BioPE and the copolymers.

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