Nanostructure and properties of polysiloxane-layered silicate nanocomposites
β Scribed by Shelly D. Burnside; Emmanuel P. Giannelis
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2000
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 172 KB
- Volume
- 38
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0887-6266
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
The relationship between nanostructure and properties in polysiloxane layered silicate nanocomposites is presented. Solvent uptake (swelling) in dispersed nanocomposites was dramatically decreased as compared to conventional composites, though intercalated nanocomposites and immiscible hybrids exhibited more conventional behavior. The swelling behavior is correlated to the amount of bound polymer (bound rubber) in the nanocomposites. Thermal analysis of the bound polymer chains showed an increase and broadening of the glass-transition temperature and loss of the crystallization transition. Both modulus and solvent uptake could be related to the amount of bound polymer formed in the system.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Polymer nanocomposites, especially polymerlayered silicate (PLS) nanocomposites, represent a radical alternative to conventionally (macroscopically) filled polymers. Because of their nanometer-size dispersion, the nanocomposites exhibit markedly improved properties when compared with the pure polyme
## Abstract Polypropylene (PP)/layeredβsilicate organoclay nanocomposites and their fibers were prepared by melt compounding and melt spinning, respectively, in the presence or absence of compatibilizer (PPβbased maleic anhydride compatibilizer) to examine the effects of the organoclay dispersion a
## Abstract Natural rubber (NR), polyurethane rubber (PUR), and NR/PURβbased nanocomposites were prepared by adding a pristine synthetic layered silicate (LS; sodium fluorohectorite) in 10 parts per hundred parts rubber, following the latex compounding route. The dispersion of the LS latices in the