Mechanical Properties of Polyisoprene-Based Elastomer
Composites
Posted on 2024-02-14 - 21:05
We have explored the origins of mechanical
reinforcement in elastomers
filled with polymer-grafted nanoparticles (NPs). The brush chains
are constructed from the same monomers as the polymer melt, although
they have different microstructures (i.e., different amounts of trans
and cis isomers). The NPs display a variety of morphologies depending
on variations in the graft density of the polymers, with these morphologies
hardly changing when the matrix (and the grafts) is cross-linked using
dicumyl peroxide (DCP). NMR measurements show that the cross-link
densities depend only on the DCP content and are independent of NP
morphologies. We find that the elastic moduli of these materials are
strongly dependent on the NP morphology but that the maximum reinforcement
occurs when the NPs percolate, in a manner where the cores are exposed
enough to have strong enthalpic interactions; these interactions could
either be due to direct core–core van der Waals attractions
or due to bridging interactions driven by polymers adsorbed on adjacent
NPs. The nonlinear mechanical response of these materials is less
sensitive to changes in NP morphology and loading. These results emphasize
the important role of the exposed NP surface in determining the moduli
of cross-linked elastomers. This last aspect is apparently less relevant
for the corresponding uncross-linked melts filled with NPs.