4.8 Article

Fabrication and Properties of Irradiation-Cross-Linked Poly(vinyl alcohol)/Clay Aerogel Composites

Journal

ACS APPLIED MATERIALS & INTERFACES
Volume 6, Issue 18, Pages 16227-16236

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/am504418w

Keywords

aerogel; poly(vinyl alcohol); gamma irradiation; mechanical properties

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [51403192]
  2. Innovation Foundation of Institute of Nuclear Physics and Chemistry [2013CX04]

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Poly(vinyl alcohol) (PVOH)/clay aerogel composites were fabricated by an environmentally friendly freeze-drying of the aqueous precursor suspensions, followed by cross-linking induced by gamma irradiation without chemical additives. The influences of cross-linking conditions, i.e., absorbed dose and polymer loading as well as density on the aerogel structure and properties, were investigated. The absorbed dose of 30 kGy was found to be the optimum dose for fabricating strong PVOH composites; the compressive modulus of an aerogel prepared from an aqueous suspension containing 2 wt % PVOH/8 wt % clay increased 10-fold, and that containing 1 wt % PVOH/9 wt % clay increased 12 times upon cross-linking with a dose of 30 kGy. Increasing the solids concentration led to an increase in the mechanical strength, in accordance with the changes in microstructure from layered structure to network structure. The increase of absorbed dose also led to decreased porous size of the network structure. Cross-linking and the increase of the PVOH lead to decreased thermal stability. The strengthened PVOH/clay aerogels possess very low flammability, as measured by cone calorimetry, with heat, smoke, and volatile products release value decreasing as increasing clay content. The mechanism of flame retardation in these materials was investigated with weight loss, FTIR, WAXD, and SEM of the burned residues. The proposed mechanism is that with decreasing fuel content (increasing clay content), increased heat and mass transport barriers are developed; simultaneously low levels of thermal conductivity are maintained during the burning.

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