Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites

In this work the effect of the compatibility between organoclays and styrene on the flammability of polystyrene/clay nanocomposites obtained through in situ incorporation was investigated. The reactions were carried out by bulk polymerization. The compatibility between organoclays and styrene was in...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Budapest University of Technology 2010-08-01
Series:eXPRESS Polymer Letters
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.expresspolymlett.com/letolt.php?file=EPL-0001420&mi=cd
id doaj-807e25cdafb54cc091fffbd852512d5c
record_format Article
spelling doaj-807e25cdafb54cc091fffbd852512d5c2020-11-24T21:05:27ZengBudapest University of Technology eXPRESS Polymer Letters1788-618X2010-08-014850050810.3144/expresspolymlett.2010.63Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocompositesIn this work the effect of the compatibility between organoclays and styrene on the flammability of polystyrene/clay nanocomposites obtained through in situ incorporation was investigated. The reactions were carried out by bulk polymerization. The compatibility between organoclays and styrene was inferred from swelling of the organoclay in styrene. The nanocomposites were characterized by X-ray diffraction and Transmission Electron Microscopy. The heat release rate was obtained by Cone Calorimeter and the nanocomposites were tested by UL94 horizontal burn test. Results showed that intercalated and partially exfoliated polystyrene/clay nanocomposites were obtained depending on the swelling behavior of the organoclay in styrene. The nanocomposites submitted to UL94 burning test presented a burning rate faster than the virgin polystyrene (PS), however an increase of the decomposition temperature and an accentuated decrease on the peak of heat release of the nanocomposites were also observed compared to virgin PS. These results indicate that PS/clay nanocomposites, either intercalated or partially exfoliated, reduced the flammability approximately by the same extent, although reduced the ignition resistance of the PS. http://www.expresspolymlett.com/letolt.php?file=EPL-0001420&mi=cdNanocompositesFlammabilityOrganoclaySwellingPolystyrene
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
title Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
spellingShingle Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
eXPRESS Polymer Letters
Nanocomposites
Flammability
Organoclay
Swelling
Polystyrene
title_short Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
title_full Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
title_fullStr Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
title_full_unstemmed Swelling of organoclays in styrene. Effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
title_sort swelling of organoclays in styrene. effect on flammability in polystyrene nanocomposites
publisher Budapest University of Technology
series eXPRESS Polymer Letters
issn 1788-618X
publishDate 2010-08-01
description In this work the effect of the compatibility between organoclays and styrene on the flammability of polystyrene/clay nanocomposites obtained through in situ incorporation was investigated. The reactions were carried out by bulk polymerization. The compatibility between organoclays and styrene was inferred from swelling of the organoclay in styrene. The nanocomposites were characterized by X-ray diffraction and Transmission Electron Microscopy. The heat release rate was obtained by Cone Calorimeter and the nanocomposites were tested by UL94 horizontal burn test. Results showed that intercalated and partially exfoliated polystyrene/clay nanocomposites were obtained depending on the swelling behavior of the organoclay in styrene. The nanocomposites submitted to UL94 burning test presented a burning rate faster than the virgin polystyrene (PS), however an increase of the decomposition temperature and an accentuated decrease on the peak of heat release of the nanocomposites were also observed compared to virgin PS. These results indicate that PS/clay nanocomposites, either intercalated or partially exfoliated, reduced the flammability approximately by the same extent, although reduced the ignition resistance of the PS.
topic Nanocomposites
Flammability
Organoclay
Swelling
Polystyrene
url http://www.expresspolymlett.com/letolt.php?file=EPL-0001420&mi=cd
_version_ 1716768694223241216