4.6 Article

Improving mechanical properties and processability of a very high Tg epoxy amine network via anti-plasticizer fortification

Journal

JOURNAL OF APPLIED POLYMER SCIENCE
Volume 139, Issue 36, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/app.52854

Keywords

mechanical properties; resins; structure-property relationships; viscosity and viscoelasticity

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [DP220100130, IH210100023]
  2. Australian Research Council [IH210100023] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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This study investigates the impact of molecular fortifiers on the mechanical and thermal properties of a highly aromatic and rigid epoxy monomer. The fortifiers are found to improve the processability and cure conversion of the material. They also reduce moisture ingress and increase modulus, but with limited improvement in toughness.
In this work, molecular fortifiers are added to a highly aromatic and rigid epoxy monomer bis(2,7 diglycidyl ether naphthalenediol) methane (NNE) possessing a very high glass transition temperature (T-g) when cured with 4,4 '-diaminodiphenyl sulfone (DDS) to explore their impact upon mechanical and thermal properties and reactivity. The molecular fortifiers used are the nonfunctional naphthalene (NAPH), the reactive diluent o-cresyl glycidyl ether (CGE) and an adduct of dihydroxy naphthalene and CGE (molecular fortifier naphthalene, MFN), a variant on the partially reacted substructures approach. The fortifiers are found to affect NNE/DDS reactivity and increase processability depending upon their propensity to attach to the network either through hydrogen bonding or pi-pi electron interactions. Thermal analysis shows that the fortifiers increased cure conversion although the T(g)s of the networks were generally unaffected until higher levels of addition. The fortifiers reduce moisture ingress and suppress glassy state beta relaxations while increasing modulus significantly. Although there is little improvement in toughness overall, some evidence for higher fracture toughness is observed for the MFN and NAPH modified networks. This work highlights the effectiveness of different molecular level fortifiers on improving properties, in particular the rigidity of highly crosslinked networks.

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