Synthesis and Compressive Response of Microcellular Foams Fabricated from Thermally Expandable Microspheres

Cellular foams are widely applied as protective and energy absorption materials in both civil and military fields. A facile and simple one-step heating method to fabricate polymeric foams is measured by adopting thermally expandable microspheres (TEMs). The ideal foaming parameters for various densi...

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Veröffentlicht in:Chinese journal of polymer science 2019-03, Vol.37 (3), p.279-288
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Rui-Zhi, Chen, Ju, Huang, Mao-Wei, Zhang, Jian, Luo, Guo-Qiang, Wang, Bao-Zhen, Li, Mei-Juan, Shen, Qiang, Zhang, Lian-Meng
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cellular foams are widely applied as protective and energy absorption materials in both civil and military fields. A facile and simple one-step heating method to fabricate polymeric foams is measured by adopting thermally expandable microspheres (TEMs). The ideal foaming parameters for various density foams were determined. Moreover, a mechanical testing machine and split Hopkinson bar (SHPB) were utilized to explore the quasi-static and dynamic compressive properties. Results showed that the cell sizes of the as-prepared TEMs foams were in the micrometer range of 11 μm to 20 μm with a uniform cell size distribution. All the foams exhibited good compressive behavior under both quasi-static and high strain rate conditions, and were related to both foam densities and strain rates. The compressive strength of the TEMs foams at 8400 s −1 was up to 4 times higher than that at 10 −4 s −1 . The effects exerted by the strain rate and sample density were evaluated by a power law equation. With increasing density, the strain rate effect was more prominent. At quasistatic strain rates below 3000 s −1 regime, initial cell wall buckling and subsequent cellular structure flattening were the main failure mechanisms. However, in the high strain rate (HSR) regime (above 5000 s −1 ), the foams were split into pieces by the following transverse inertia force.
ISSN:0256-7679
1439-6203
DOI:10.1007/s10118-019-2187-2