Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent
The foaming process and cellular morphologies of poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (SAN)/chlorinated polyethylene (CPE) blends with supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) as a blowing agent were investigated in this study. As compared to pure SAN foam in the same batch, the foamed blends with various CPE...
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doaj-04427c23959444fd9421caf24f0560c12020-11-25T01:19:07ZengMDPI AGPolymers2073-43602019-01-011118910.3390/polym11010089polym11010089Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing AgentHai-Chen Zhang0Chun-Na Yu1Yong Liang2Gui-Xiang Lin3Cong Meng4School of Materials Science & Energy Engineering, Foshan University, Foshan 528000, ChinaGuangzhou Quality Supervision and Testing Institute, Guangzhou 511447, ChinaSchool of Materials Science & Energy Engineering, Foshan University, Foshan 528000, ChinaSchool of Materials Science & Energy Engineering, Foshan University, Foshan 528000, ChinaKey Laboratory of Polymer Processing Engineering, Ministry of Education, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou 510640, ChinaThe foaming process and cellular morphologies of poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (SAN)/chlorinated polyethylene (CPE) blends with supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) as a blowing agent were investigated in this study. As compared to pure SAN foam in the same batch, the foamed blends with various CPE elastomer content had smaller average pore size and larger cell density. This is probably related to the inhibition of bubble growth by elastomer, resulting in poor melt flowability and strong viscoelasticity, and the efficient bubble heterogeneous nucleation caused by numerous phase interfaces inside the incompletely compatible blend system. In addition, many tiny interconnected holes through the pore walls were formed to connect adjacent micropores in foamed blend samples. The formation mechanism of such interconnected pores is probably due to the fracture of stretched melt around the bubble from phase interfaces with weak interactions. These facts suggest an effective path to control pore size, cell density and even interconnected pores of blend foams depends on the compatibility of the blend system and difference in foamability of individual components in supercritical CO2.http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/11/1/89supercritical CO2 foaminginterconnected poresbubble interface nucleationblends |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Hai-Chen Zhang Chun-Na Yu Yong Liang Gui-Xiang Lin Cong Meng |
spellingShingle |
Hai-Chen Zhang Chun-Na Yu Yong Liang Gui-Xiang Lin Cong Meng Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent Polymers supercritical CO2 foaming interconnected pores bubble interface nucleation blends |
author_facet |
Hai-Chen Zhang Chun-Na Yu Yong Liang Gui-Xiang Lin Cong Meng |
author_sort |
Hai-Chen Zhang |
title |
Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent |
title_short |
Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent |
title_full |
Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent |
title_fullStr |
Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent |
title_full_unstemmed |
Foaming Behavior and Microcellular Morphologies of Incompatible SAN/CPE Blends with Supercritical Carbon Dioxide as a Physical Blowing Agent |
title_sort |
foaming behavior and microcellular morphologies of incompatible san/cpe blends with supercritical carbon dioxide as a physical blowing agent |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Polymers |
issn |
2073-4360 |
publishDate |
2019-01-01 |
description |
The foaming process and cellular morphologies of poly(styrene-co-acrylonitrile) (SAN)/chlorinated polyethylene (CPE) blends with supercritical carbon dioxide (scCO2) as a blowing agent were investigated in this study. As compared to pure SAN foam in the same batch, the foamed blends with various CPE elastomer content had smaller average pore size and larger cell density. This is probably related to the inhibition of bubble growth by elastomer, resulting in poor melt flowability and strong viscoelasticity, and the efficient bubble heterogeneous nucleation caused by numerous phase interfaces inside the incompletely compatible blend system. In addition, many tiny interconnected holes through the pore walls were formed to connect adjacent micropores in foamed blend samples. The formation mechanism of such interconnected pores is probably due to the fracture of stretched melt around the bubble from phase interfaces with weak interactions. These facts suggest an effective path to control pore size, cell density and even interconnected pores of blend foams depends on the compatibility of the blend system and difference in foamability of individual components in supercritical CO2. |
topic |
supercritical CO2 foaming interconnected pores bubble interface nucleation blends |
url |
http://www.mdpi.com/2073-4360/11/1/89 |
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