4.7 Article

Effect of glass fiber surface chemistry on the mechanical properties of glass fiber reinforced, rubber-toughened nylon 6

Journal

POLYMER
Volume 43, Issue 17, Pages 4673-4687

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/S0032-3861(02)00302-6

Keywords

mechanical properties; glass fibers; polymer matrix

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The mechanical properties of nylon 6 and its blends with maleated ethylene-propylene rubber (EPR-g-MA) plus glass fibers were examined as a function of the chemical functionality of the silane surface treatment applied to the glass fibers. Three reactive silane coupling agents, with anhydride, epoxy, or amine functionality, were used and found to have little effect on the mechanical properties when no EPR-g-MA is present. When 20 wt% EPR-g-MA is used as a rubber toughener, however, the yield strength and Izod impact strength were lowest for the amine functional silane and highest for the anhydride silane, while the epoxy silane fell in-between. These results were attributed to the differences in reactivity of the three reactive silanes. An unreactive silane (octyl groups) was used as a release agent on the glass fibers and compared with the anhydride functional silane. The octyl silane did not improve the ductility of the composite, as may have been speculated, and had poor yield strength and impact resistance when compared to the anhydride silane. Both octyl and anhydride treated glass fibers improve the heat distortion temperature such that most of the high temperature stiffness that is lost on addition of EPR-g-MA is regained by adding glass fibers. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.

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