4.6 Article

Study on the water-tree ageing characteristics of polyethylene/organic montmorillonite and crosslinked polyethylene/organic montmorillonite nanocomposites

Journal

HIGH VOLTAGE
Volume 8, Issue 2, Pages 262-273

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1049/hve2.12251

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The dispersion state of nanoparticles and the crosslinking process of polymers have effects on the properties of nanocomposite materials. In this study, the researchers investigated the effects of crosslinking behavior on the water-tree ageing characteristics of nanocomposite dielectrics at the molecular level. The results showed that crosslinking can reduce the initiation probability and length of water trees, thus improving the water-tree resistance of the nanocomposite materials.
The dispersion state of nanoparticles affects the properties of composites, and the crosslinking process of polymers affects the dispersion state of nanoparticles. In order to investigate the effects of crosslinking behaviour on the water-tree ageing characteristics of nanocomposite dielectrics at the molecular level, polyethylene/organic-montmorillonite (PE/organic montmorillonite (OMMT)) and crosslinked polyethylene/organic-montmorillonite (XLPE/OMMT) nanocomposites were prepared by the melt blending method, after which the accelerated water-tree ageing experiments were conducted using a needle electrode. Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, differential scanning calorimetry, successive self-nucleation annealing and scanning electron microscope (SEM) tests were conducted to characterise the properties of the samples before and after water-tree ageing. The results indicate that the initiation probability and the length of water trees in XLPE/OMMT are less than those in PE/OMMT. The carbonyl index in the water-tree area of the two nanocomposites increases, indicating that the water-tree ageing is the result of electrochemical degradation. The crystallisability of the water-tree area degrades, decreasing the crystallinity and the lamellar thickness. The growth of water trees destroys molecular chains and crystal structures, which results in local cracks. There are many holes for the water tree growth in the PE/OMMT specimen. However, the crosslinked meshwork not only restricts the movement of macromolecular chains but also increases the stability of the lamellar barrier effect of OMMT. The combination of the two effects significantly improves the water-tree resistance of the XLPE/OMMT nanocomposite.

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