## Abstract The electrical conductivity of polyester resins crossβlinked with 5% of styrene and 45% of methyl methacrylate and doped with acetylene carbon black has been investigated. A high change of the electrical conductivity of the mixture was found at a critical content of carbon black ranging
Electrically conductive thermosetting resins containing low concentrations of carbon black
β Scribed by M. Narkis; I. Rafail; G. Victor; A. Tzur; R. Tchoudakov; A. Siegmann
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 272 KB
- Volume
- 76
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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β¦ Synopsis
A cured vinyl ester resin containing electrically conductive carbon black (CB) particles shows electrical percolation at very low CB concentration (Ο½0.5 phr). CB particles have a strong tendency to agglomerate in a low-viscosity resin, such as vinyl ester, unsaturated polyester resin, and epoxy resins. The agglomeration process in the low-viscosity vinyl ester resin generates electrically conductive paths already in the resin's liquid state, which undergo partial fixation by room temperature curing and full fixation by hot postcuring. The fully cured castings containing CB concentrations above percolation are characterized by a constant, temperature-independent conductivity, over a wide temperature range. The current-voltage relationships of the cured vinyl ester/CB castings obey a power-law dependency. The presence of the continuous CB paths in the vinyl ester casting is clearly observed in fracture surfaces formed at 100Β°C.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
In this work, the electrical characterization of three extrinsic polymeric conducting systems was carried out using complex impedance spectroscopy. These systems were obtained by the incorporation of conducting fillers (carbon black and metallic copper), on the one hand, and, on the other hand, by b