Thermal Analysis of Polymer Blends

2019 ◽  
Vol 56 (4) ◽  
pp. 680-686
Author(s):  
Claudia-Mihaela Gorovei ◽  
Marina Bunea ◽  
Adrian Cîrciumaru ◽  
Iulian-Gabriel Bîrsan

One of the major disadvantages of epoxy resins when they are used to impregnate a fabric or when they are used to obtain laminates is their rigidity that leads in loading conditions to the matrix fracture followed by breaking of fabric due to a shearing mechanism in which the two free parts of the matrix fracture acts as a scissor. During the design of a composite material or structure such behavior of the matrix has to be taken into account and the problem could be solved if the rigidity of the matrix is reduced. The present study is about changing the value of this parameter by using an organic polymer solvent and a thermoplastic polymer to modify the basic properties of an epoxy resin. At this time an analysis of thermal properties of polymer blends is done to determine the effect of solvent and thermoplastic polymer presence inside the epoxy matrix.

Author(s):  
A.O. Rogacheva ◽  
O.S. Khalipova ◽  
A.S. Brichkov ◽  
V.V. Kozik

Spherical TiO2/Cr2O3 oxides composites were obtained by template method accompanied with sol-gel method. Ion exchange resins of spherical form (TOKEM-100 and TOKEM-250) were used as an organic polymer matrix. Thermal analysis, X-ray phase analysis and micro-X-ray spectral analysis were used to identify the formation process and compositions of oxides composites. The formation of spherical oxide composite ends at 400 °C and the final products are a mixture of two oxides: Cr2O3 and TiO2 regardless of the structure of the used template. According SEM data prepared TiO2/Cr2O3 composites have spherical form and the size of sphere found to be in a range from 300 to 870 µm.


Author(s):  
O. Popoola ◽  
A.H. Heuer ◽  
P. Pirouz

The addition of fibres or particles (TiB2, SiC etc.) into TiAl intermetallic alloys could increase their toughness without compromising their good high temperature mechanical and chemical properties. This paper briefly discribes the microstructure developed by a TiAl/TiB2 composite material fabricated with the XD™ process and forged at 960°C.The specimens for transmission electron microscopy (TEM) were prepared in the usual way (i.e. diamond polishing and argon ion beam thinning) and examined on a JEOL 4000EX for microstucture and on a Philips 400T equipped with a SiLi detector for microanalyses.The matrix was predominantly γ (TiAl with L10 structure) and α2(TisAl with DO 19 structure) phases with various morphologies shown in figure 1.


2003 ◽  
Vol 18 (2) ◽  
pp. 151-155 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. S. Pinchuk ◽  
V. A. Goldade ◽  
A. G. Kravtsov ◽  
S. V. Zotov ◽  
B. Jurkowski ◽  
...  

2002 ◽  
Vol 740 ◽  
Author(s):  
Samuel T. Lutta ◽  
Hong Dong ◽  
Peter Y. Zavalij ◽  
M. Stanley Whittingham

ABSTRACTWe are exploring the synthesis and properties of structured vanadium oxides mainly nanotubes and nanorods. Nanotubes initially formed with surfactant templates have been readily exchanged with simple cations without change of the basal-plane structure. These compounds contain d-like vanadium oxide layers with the vanadium in VO6 octahedra. This structure is particularly suitable for redox reactions. In this paper we report on synthesis of vanadium oxide, (NH4)xV2O5-d·nH2O rods using organic polymer as template. This compound has been synthesized by sol-gel reaction and subsequent hydrothermal treatment. TGA, SEM, XRD and FTIR were used to characterize this compound. Thermal analysis of this compound shows that the fibrous morphology is maintained when it is heated in nitrogen and oxygen above 300 °C. However, in both cases the size of the fibers decreases. Performance of this compound as cathode material in secondary electrolyte has been investigated using LiPF6 as electrolyte. A capacity of 140 mAh/g was obtained which remained fairly constant with up to at least 10 cycles. We also investigated electrochemical behavior of thermal products.


2014 ◽  
Vol 918 ◽  
pp. 21-26
Author(s):  
Chen Kang Huang ◽  
Yun Ching Leong

In this study, the transport theorem of phonons and electrons is utilized to create a model to predict the thermal conductivity of composite materials. By observing or assuming the dopant displacement in the matrix, a physical model between dopant and matrix can be built, and the composite material can be divided into several regions. In each region, the phonon or electron scattering caused by boundaries, impurities, or U-processes was taken into account to calculate the thermal conductivity. The model is then used to predict the composite thermal conductivity for several composite materials. It shows a pretty good agreement with previous studies in literatures. Based on the model, some discussions about dopant size and volume fraction are also made.


Author(s):  
M.N. Obaid ◽  
S.H. Radhi

Purpose: The number of people suffering from Degenerative Disc Disease (DDD) is increasing. The disease causes heavy pain and restrict a number of day-to-day life activities. In extreme cases, the degraded disc is removed under total disc replacement which is usually made up of Ultra-High Molecular Weight Polyethylene (UHMWPE). The material has astounding biocompatible characteristics mechanical properties and wear resistance. However, these characteristics are insufficient in arthroplasty application. Therefore, research investigations are ongoing to improve tribological properties through reinforcement that may result in a composite material of UHMWPE. Thus the current study is aimed at reinforcing UHMWPE with short fibres of polyesters to enhance the tribological properties and surface characteristic so as to improve wear resistance and nourish the fibroblast cells on synthetic disc. Design/methodology/approach: The researcher prepared UHMWPE composite material, reinforced with different weight fractions of short polyester fibres (2, 4, 6, 8 and 10% following hot press method. Further pin-on-disc device was used to study the tribological properties (coefficient of friction and volume of wear). The study tested surface roughness and surface characteristics by atomic force microscopy (AFM) device, hardness by shore D device, contact angle to study the effect of polyester short fibres on wettability of UHMWPE surface and tested the thermal properties and crystalline degree using Differential Scanning Calorimetry measurement (DSC) device. Findings: The results infer that the wear resistance got improved when using 2% w.t polyester though it got decreased initially. However, the value was still more than neat UHMWPE. There was a decrease observed in coefficient of friction, but after 4 w.t% polyester, the coefficient of friction got increased due to increasing percentage of fibres which make it harder and stiff compared to UHMWPE. There was a decline observed in surface roughness due to alignment of the fibres with smooth surface. The contact angle got increased in a moderate range while the roughness enhanced the growth of fibroblast cell. The hardness of composite material got increased, because the fibres turned stiffer and harder than the matrix. DSC results infer the improvements in thermal stability due to high thermal properties of polyester fibres compared to UHMWPE. The degree of crystallinity got increased which in turn enhanced wear resistance, especially at 6 w.t % polyester fibres. There was a mild increase observed in density since the density of polyester is higher than polymer. Research limitations/implications: The major challenge was the dispersion of fibres. Uniform distribution of fibres within the matrix (UHMWPE) was achieved through two steps of mixing processes such as mechanical mixture and twin extruder. In future studies, fatigue tests must be conducted to study the behaviour of prepared composite materials under fatigue cycle. Practical implications: A significant objective is how to connect among different properties to obtain good improvement in tribological and surface properties so as to enhance wear resistance and growth of fibrolase cells. Originality/value: In this study, polymeric short fibres were used as reinforcement with polymeric matrix to enhance the wettability of fibres with matrix. In this way, the bonding among them got increased which supports the tribological, surface, and crystalline behaviour.


2020 ◽  
pp. 154-160
Author(s):  
Yu.A. Gribanov ◽  
I.V. Gurin ◽  
V.V. Gujda ◽  
A.N. Bukolov ◽  
V.V. Kolosenko

The corrosion resistance of carbon-carbon composite materials (C–C composites) was studied in a corrosive media of coolant NaF+ZrF4 salt (a model heat-transfer) at 700 °С in the air flow. It has been shown that C–C composite material is resistant to the model heat-transfer even under conditions of critical temperature accident. The main mechanism that leads to the C–C composite corrosion is a mechanism of composite material oxidation due to the contact with the air. The study has evidenced that the C–C composite burn-up rate well correlates with the pyrocarbon matrix content in the composite, the matrix content increase by 2530% results in the composite corrosion resistance increase by a factor of 2–4. So, by developing corrosion-resistant carbon-carbon composites one has a problem of finding an optimum fiber-matrix ratio in the composite. It has been confirmed experimentally that by silication of C–C composites with the use of the methods which were developed in NSC KIPT it is possible to increase the service life of products under simulated accident conditions by a factor of 7–7.5.


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