Morphology and properties of thermoplastic polyurethane nancomposites incorporating hydrophilic layered silicates


Autoria(s): Finnigan, Bradley; Martin, Darren; Halley, Peter; Truss, Rowan; Campbell, Kayleen
Contribuinte(s)

S. Z. D. Cheng

T. Hashimoto

Data(s)

01/03/2004

Resumo

Hydrophilic layered silicate/polyurethane nanocomposites were prepared via twin screw extrusion and solvent casting. Good dispersion and delamination was achieved-regardless of processing route, illustrating that the need for optimised processing conditions diminishes when there is a strong driving for de for intercalation between the polymer and organosilicate. Evidence for altered polyurethane microphase morphology in the nanocomposites was provided by DMTA and DSC. WAXD results suggested that the appearance of an additional high temperature melting endotherm in some melt-compounded nanocomposites was not due to the formation of a second crystal polymorph, but rather due to more well-ordered hard microdomains. Solvent casting was found to be the preferred processing route due to the avoidance of polyurethane and surfactant degradation associated with melt processing. While tensile strength and elongation were not improved on organosilicate addition, large increases in stiffness were observed. At a 7 wt% organosilicate loading, a 3.2-fold increase in Young's modulus was achieved by solvent casting. The nanocomposites also displayed higher hysteresis and permanent set. (C) 2004 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:71461

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Elsevier

Palavras-Chave #Nanocomposites #Polyurethane #Processing #Soft Segment Length #Block Copolymers #Thermal-degradation #Mechanical-properties #Saxs-dsc #Elastomers #Polymers #Behavior #Model #Deformation #C1 #330203 Curriculum Studies - Science Education #1007 Nanotechnology
Tipo

Journal Article