Polystyrenes with macro-intercalated organoclay. Part II. Rheology and mechanical performance
Polymeric nanocomposites (PNC) of polstyrene (PS) with organoclay were studied for their rheological and mechanical behavior. The organoclay (COPS) is a product of clay quaternization with a copolymer of styrene with vinyl benzyl tri-methyl ammonium chloride. PNC preparation and characterization was...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Polymer (Guilford) 2005-11, Vol.46 (25), p.11569-11581 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Polymeric nanocomposites (PNC) of polstyrene (PS) with organoclay were studied for their rheological and mechanical behavior. The organoclay (COPS) is a product of clay quaternization with a copolymer of styrene with vinyl benzyl tri-methyl ammonium chloride. PNC preparation and characterization was described in Part I of this paper. The clay platelets in COPS and its PNC's are well dispersed, i.e. with the interlayer spacings of
d
001=7–8
nm. By contrast,
d
001=3–4
nm for PNC with Cloisite
® 10A. However, the COPS in PS formed large, deformable domains. At concentration exceeding 5.8-wt% of COPS, the domains started to form a three-dimensional network with enhanced elasticity and progressive viscoelastic non-linearity. At temperatures of 160–180
°C the neat COPS did not flow; its behavior resembled that of a crosslinked elastomer. Application of the time–temperature superposition led to master curves of bending moduli vs. 19 decades of reduced frequency. The curves indicated a transition at ca. 180
°C, most likely associated with the disintegration of ammonium ion clusters. With the same amount of clay the mechanical properties of PNC with COPS were slightly worse than those with Cloisite
® 10A—the immiscibility of COPS, and the presence of extractable (by the matrix) low molecular weight compounds explain the behavior. |
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ISSN: | 0032-3861 1873-2291 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.polymer.2005.10.032 |