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On nanocomposite fabrication: using rheology to characterize filler/polymer interactions in epoxy-based nanocomposites

On nanocomposite fabrication: using rheology to characterize filler/polymer interactions in epoxy-based nanocomposites
On nanocomposite fabrication: using rheology to characterize filler/polymer interactions in epoxy-based nanocomposites
The interactions that occur between an amorphous silicon nitride (Si3N4) nanofiller and an epoxy matrix are examined, as revealed by rheological changes in a diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA)-based epoxy resin prior to curing and thermal analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and dielectric spectroscopy of the resulting amine-cured systems. The results show that isothermally heating the as-received Si3N4 in DGEBA at 100 °C leads to increases in the viscosity of the mixture. Analysis of rheological data obtained from unfilled, as-received Si3N4 -filled, and calcined Si3N4 -filled epoxy systems leads us to interpret this increase in viscosity as arising from reactions between epoxide groups of the DGEBA and nanoparticle surface groups, notably involving surface amines, which are stimulated by the elevated temperature. The extent of this filler/resin reaction depends on the material processing protocol used, particularly prior calcination of the Si3N4 and the temperature and duration of nanoparticle/DGEBA mixing. Glass transition temperature data show that cured samples prepared using different methods have significantly different glass transition temperatures, which is a consequence of the epoxide/amine stoichiometric imbalances that result from prior reactions between the Si3N4  and the DGEBA. Consistent behavior was observed in the dielectric response. These results demonstrate that ultimate macroscopic properties of Si3N4 /epoxy nanocomposites are critically affected by details of the processing protocol. Furthermore, we infer that, by using controlled prior calcination of the Si3N4 , it is may be possible to vary the initial surface chemistry of the nanoparticles so as to adjust their reactivity with epoxy-containing moieties. Here, this is exemplified using only two somewhat extreme thermal treatments and a bifunctional DGEBA-type compound but, we suggest, that the concept may be extended to many other mono- and polyfunctional epoxy-containing compounds in order to generate a wide range of different grafted nanoparticle systems. This strategy may provide a versatile means of adjusting the surface chemistry of inorganic nitride nanoparticles, in order to tailor their surface chemistry and thereby modify resulting nanocomposite properties.
2468-5194
Alhabill, Fuad N.
818b3f40-fbd0-4df3-a2fc-70b9b9084dca
Vaughan, Alun
6d813b66-17f9-4864-9763-25a6d659d8a3
Andritsch, Thomas
8681e640-e584-424e-a1f1-0d8b713de01c
Alhabill, Fuad N.
818b3f40-fbd0-4df3-a2fc-70b9b9084dca
Vaughan, Alun
6d813b66-17f9-4864-9763-25a6d659d8a3
Andritsch, Thomas
8681e640-e584-424e-a1f1-0d8b713de01c

Alhabill, Fuad N., Vaughan, Alun and Andritsch, Thomas (2021) On nanocomposite fabrication: using rheology to characterize filler/polymer interactions in epoxy-based nanocomposites. Materials Today Chemistry, 22, [100559]. (doi:10.1016/j.mtchem.2021.100559).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The interactions that occur between an amorphous silicon nitride (Si3N4) nanofiller and an epoxy matrix are examined, as revealed by rheological changes in a diglycidyl ether of bisphenol-A (DGEBA)-based epoxy resin prior to curing and thermal analysis, scanning electron microscopy, and dielectric spectroscopy of the resulting amine-cured systems. The results show that isothermally heating the as-received Si3N4 in DGEBA at 100 °C leads to increases in the viscosity of the mixture. Analysis of rheological data obtained from unfilled, as-received Si3N4 -filled, and calcined Si3N4 -filled epoxy systems leads us to interpret this increase in viscosity as arising from reactions between epoxide groups of the DGEBA and nanoparticle surface groups, notably involving surface amines, which are stimulated by the elevated temperature. The extent of this filler/resin reaction depends on the material processing protocol used, particularly prior calcination of the Si3N4 and the temperature and duration of nanoparticle/DGEBA mixing. Glass transition temperature data show that cured samples prepared using different methods have significantly different glass transition temperatures, which is a consequence of the epoxide/amine stoichiometric imbalances that result from prior reactions between the Si3N4  and the DGEBA. Consistent behavior was observed in the dielectric response. These results demonstrate that ultimate macroscopic properties of Si3N4 /epoxy nanocomposites are critically affected by details of the processing protocol. Furthermore, we infer that, by using controlled prior calcination of the Si3N4 , it is may be possible to vary the initial surface chemistry of the nanoparticles so as to adjust their reactivity with epoxy-containing moieties. Here, this is exemplified using only two somewhat extreme thermal treatments and a bifunctional DGEBA-type compound but, we suggest, that the concept may be extended to many other mono- and polyfunctional epoxy-containing compounds in order to generate a wide range of different grafted nanoparticle systems. This strategy may provide a versatile means of adjusting the surface chemistry of inorganic nitride nanoparticles, in order to tailor their surface chemistry and thereby modify resulting nanocomposite properties.

Text
Revised Article (MTCHEM-D-21-00321) - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 15 August 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 20 September 2021
Published date: December 2021

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 480276
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/480276
ISSN: 2468-5194
PURE UUID: b9d0502f-1bec-400d-a1c4-0b80791e1226
ORCID for Alun Vaughan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-0535-513X
ORCID for Thomas Andritsch: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3462-022X

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Date deposited: 01 Aug 2023 17:15
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:33

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Contributors

Author: Fuad N. Alhabill
Author: Alun Vaughan ORCID iD
Author: Thomas Andritsch ORCID iD

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