4.5 Article

Reaction kinetics and phase transformations during cure of a thermoplastic-modified epoxy thermoset

Journal

MACROMOLECULAR MATERIALS AND ENGINEERING
Volume 292, Issue 1, Pages 46-61

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/mame.200600275

Keywords

autocatalytic; epoxy amine kinetics; gelation; phase separation

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A comprehensive thermal and rheological characterisation of a commercially important aerospace resin system modified with a thermoplastic toughener is presented here. The primary focus has been the understanding of how the cure kinetics and mechanism relate to other processes such as phase separation during cure. Differential scanning calorimetry has shown that thermoplastic modification does not affect the cure mechanism significantly and that the process was dominated by an autocatalytic process up to vitrification after which diffusion-controlled processes dominate regardless of thermoplastic concentration. Thermoplastic addition at 10 wt.-% PEI was found to increase the final cure conversion compared with the neat resin and inhibit the onset of diffusion control below a cure temperature of 160 degrees C. At 20 wt.-% PEI concentration the final conversion and the onset of diffusion control were similar until 150 degrees C, after which they displayed lower values than the neat resin. Rheological analysis showed that the phase separation process could be followed conveniently through the changes in viscosity and exhibited effects consistent with expected variations in morphology. The 10 wt.-% PEI system displayed abrupt increases in viscosities which were indicative of a dispersed particulate morphology, while the 20 wt.-% PEI system displayed more complex behaviour consistent with a phase-inverted or co-continuous structure. The gelation process was shown to obey a power law model although the local environment or morphology of the reactive epoxide group at higher PEI concentrations was shown to affect the fit to the model.

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