The fracture toughness of epoxy thermosets was increased by up to 220% using very low-molecular-weight (ฯณ 1000 g/mol) imide thermoplastic. The objective was to produce a low-viscosity prepolymer that could be easily autoclave-processed to give a tough thermoset. Here, an homogenous epoxy prepolymer
Investigation of readily processable thermoplastic-toughened thermosets. I. BMIs toughened via a reactive solvent approach
โ Scribed by A. Gopala; H. Wu; F. Harris; P. Heiden
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 1998
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 158 KB
- Volume
- 69
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0021-8995
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โฆ Synopsis
Moderate increases (ร 50-75%) in the toughness of bismaleimides (BMIs) were achieved with very low-molecular-weight ( ร 1000 g/mol) imide thermoplastics at low levels of thermoplastic loading ( ร 10-20%). The thermoplastic was introduced into the BMI using a simple, one-pot, reactive solvent approach. In this approach, the reactive diluent of a two-part BMI was used as the reaction solvent for the thermoplastic synthesis. The BMI monomer was then dissolved in the thermoplastic reaction solution to yield a low-viscosity homogenous prepolymer. The viscosity of the thermoplastic solution was ร 6 Pa S at 55ะC. The effect of thermoplastic loading and molecular weight on viscosity was determined by rheology, and the fracture toughness of neat resin plaques was determined by compact tension. Increasing the thermoplastic loading increased prepolymer viscosity without improving toughness, while increasing the thermoplastic molecular weight increased the toughness by only 25% more than the lowestmolecular-weight thermoplastic, yet increased viscosity fivefold. Fracture surfaces showed no obvious phase separation by scanning electron microscopy.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
This is the fourth article in a series describing efforts to produce tough, high-performance thermosets from very low viscosity prepolymers which are autoclave processable. Hydroxy-terminated hyperbranched polyester (HBP) with a systematically increased molar mass was used to toughen bismaleimide (B
This is the third in a five-part series describing the preparation of tough, high-performance thermosets from low viscosity, autoclave-processable prepolymers. The first 2 articles described toughening of bismaleimides (BMI) and epoxy with linear imide thermoplastics of ฯณ 1000 g/mol. Highly processa